Absolutely, although in practice, the frequency of the sounds would need to be fairly close to the limit of human hearing so that you wouldn't need to be going very fast. At very high speeds required for very high doppler shifts, wind noise would likely drown out what you were trying to hear.
man_o_brass t1_j1egnvb wrote
Reply to Can the Doppler effect make sounds inaudible by shifting frequencies out of human hearing range? Or vice versa? by IonnoFry
Absolutely, although in practice, the frequency of the sounds would need to be fairly close to the limit of human hearing so that you wouldn't need to be going very fast. At very high speeds required for very high doppler shifts, wind noise would likely drown out what you were trying to hear.