Wavelength
Wavelength is the distance between the 2 cycle of wave
0.02 M = 4500 Hertz
Frequency And Period
The unit of frequency is hertz, frequency represents the amount or the cycle of waves that passes in a particular amount of time
1 Hertz = 1 Cycle of wave
The period represents the amount of time taken for 1 wave to pass on
Formulae And Relation Of Frequency And Period
Frequency = 1/Period
Period = 1/Frequency
Wave Speed
The wave speed represents the speed of the wave that it travels at, this speed is calculated via meters per second
The wave speed can also be said as the speed of energy that is passed from one place to the another
Two types of waves
Transversal wave
Longitude wave
These are the 2 types of waves that the source of energy travels at, for example light travels via transversal wave while sound travels via longitudinal waves
Transversal Wave And Longitudinal Waves
Transversal waves move through the medium carrying energy in a perpendicular way
The particles vibrate 90 degree to the way energy is moving
Longitudinal waves work as the vibrating particles collide with the other particles and keep moving
In longitudinal waves there are 2 concepts, rarefaction and compression, rarefaction occurs when there is a gap or distance between the waves while compression is when the waves are together
Sound is an example for longitudinal waves are when something like a drum is played the particles vibrate and collide, creating a pattern that's how energy is transferred
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What’s the difference between a pulse and a continuous wave?
How are transverse and longitudinal waves fundamentally different?
How can you tell if a wave is mechanical or electromagnetic just by observing it?
Why can electromagnetic waves travel through space, but sound waves can’t?
How do radio waves, microwaves, and X-rays differ if they’re all electromagnetic?
In what ways are ocean waves similar to and different from sound waves?
What causes seismic waves during an earthquake, and how do P-waves and S-waves differ?
What makes light both a wave and a particle (wave-particle duality)?
keywords
Energy transfer
Oscillation
Wavelength
Frequency
Amplitude
Period
Wave speed
Crest and trough
Reflection
Refraction
Diffraction
Interference
Absorption
Resonance
Standing wave