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Difference between revisions of "Wave"

(About Waves)
(Examples)
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| style="height:20px; width:200px; text-align:center;" |A water '''wave''' appears to be [[Transverse Wave|transverse]] from the surface.
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| style="height:20px; width:200px; text-align:center;" |A water '''wave''' appears as a [[Transverse Wave|transverse]] from the surface.
 
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Revision as of 16:29, 18 February 2019

Key Stage 3

Meaning

A wave is a vibration that transfers energy from one location to another.

About Waves

Waves can transmit energy and information from one place to another.
Waves travel through a medium that allows the vibration.

When a wave meets a boundary between two materials it can be:

There are two types of wave; transverse and longitudinal.
In longitudinal waves the vibration is in the same direction as the energy transfer.
In transverse waves the vibration is perpendicular to the direction as the energy transfer.

Examples

Transverse Wave Longitudinal Wave
TransverseWave.gif
LongitudinalWave.gif
This is a transverse wave on a string where the vibration is perpendicular to the motion of the wave. This is a longitudinal wave on a string where the vibration is parallel to the motion of the wave.
Water Waves
WaveFrequency.gif
A water wave appears as a transverse from the surface.
Sound Waves
VibrateSound1.gif
Sound waves are longitudinal waves of compression.
Light Waves
EMWave.gif
Light waves are electromagnetic waves, which are transverse with the vibration at right angles to the motion of the wave.