waves

    Cards (39)

    • What type of vibrations occur in transverse waves?
      Vibrations are perpendicular to energy transfer
    • What type of vibrations occur in longitudinal waves?
      Vibrations are parallel to energy transfer
    • What is the frequency range of ultrasound?
      Above 20,000 Hz
    • How is ultrasound used in medical imaging?
      Pulses reflect off tissue boundaries to create images
    • What are the three types of seismic waves emitted by an earthquake?
      P, S, and L waves
    • What type of wave is a P wave?
      Longitudinal and fast
    • What type of wave is an S wave?
      Transverse and slower than P waves
    • What do L waves cause during an earthquake?
      Violent shaking of the crust
    • How do P and S waves behave as they travel through the Earth?
      They refract due to increasing density
    • Why can't S waves travel through the outer core?
      Because they cannot travel through liquids
    • What is a black body in terms of radiation?
      A perfect absorber and emitter of radiation
    • What type of waves are sound waves?
      Longitudinal
    • How does amplitude affect sound?
      It affects the volume of the sound
    • How does frequency affect sound?
      It affects the pitch of the sound
    • How are echoes used in SONAR?
      To measure distances to submarines and fish
    • What happens when light hits a surface?
      It can reflect
    • What are the two types of reflection?
      Specular and diffuse
    • What is the law of reflection?
      Angle of incidence equals angle of reflection
    • What happens to colors when light passes through a filter?
      All colors except the filter color are absorbed
    • Why do surfaces appear a certain color?
      Due to the colors of light they reflect
    • What are the two types of images?
      Real and virtual
    • How does a convex lens affect light?
      It refracts light to a focus
    • What can a convex lens do to images?
      Images can be magnified
    • What is the formula for magnification?
      Magnification = image height / object height
    • What are transparent and translucent materials?
      They transmit light
    • What are opaque materials?
      They absorb or reflect light
    • What is refraction?
      Light changing speed in different densities
    • What happens to light when it travels from less dense to more dense medium?
      It refracts towards the normal
    • What happens to light when it travels from more dense to less dense medium?
      It refracts away from the normal
    • How does a concave lens affect light?
      It refracts light so it spreads out
    • What is the effect of a concave lens on images?
      It diverges light rays
    • What happens to the image if an object is more than 2 focal lengths from the lens?
      The image is diminished, inverted, and real
    • What is the image like if an object is between 1 and 2 focal lengths from the lens?
      The image is magnified, inverted, and real
    • What defines a magnifying glass in terms of object distance?
      The object is less than 1 focal length
    • What is true about the image produced by a magnifying glass?
      The image is magnified and bigger than the object
    • Why do rays not meet at a point when using a magnifying glass?
      The image produced is virtual
    • When does a convex lens produce a virtual image?
      When it is used as a magnifying glass
    • What is the distance from the lens to the principal focus called?
      Focal length
    • What effect do concave lenses have on light rays?
      They make light rays diverge (spread out)
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