Waves

    Cards (23)

    • Longitudinal waves are oscillations which occur parallel to the direction of travel.
    • In a longitudinal wave, the particles come close together and then push apart.
    • When the particles are close together, this is called a compression.
    • When the particles are far apart, this is called a rarefaction.
    • An example of a longitudinal wave is a sound wave.
    • Longitudinal waves are also called pressure waves.
    • Transverse waves occur when the oscillations are perpendicular or at right angles (90°) to the direction of travel.
    • Examples of transverse waves include water waves and electromagnetic waves.
    • Electromagnetic waves are transverse waves.
    • Electromagnetic waves range in wavelength size. The largest to smallest wavelength waves are:
      • Radio waves.
      • Microwaves.
      • Infra-red.
      • Visible Light.
      • Ultra-Violet.
      • X-Rays.
      • Gamma Ray.
    • Electromagnetic waves are able to travel through a vacuum (such as space) so do not need a medium to travel through.
    • Here you can see a pressure wave. The particles compress, and then push apart, leading to an area of high pressure which moves in space, and an area of low pressure which follows it.
    • A wave is a vibration that transfers energy.
    • Waves are oscillations or vibrations. All waves transfer energy.
    • The matter a wave passes through does not move from its position.
    • You can see information about a wave on an oscilloscope. It displays this information on a screen.
      • Wavelength - the distance between a point of a wave to the same point on the next wave.
    • Peak or crest - the top of a wave.
      Trough - the bottom of a wave.
    • Amplitude - the distance from the middle to the crest or trough of the wave.
    • Frequency: the number of waves that travel past a single point every second. Measured in Hertz (Hz).
    • This is an oscilloscope. The wavelength is the distance between two peaks. The amplitude is the distance from the middle of the wave to the peak.
    • If we know the frequency of the wave and the wavelength, we can work out the speed it travels at. Light travels about one million times faster than sound.
    • Particles move at right angles to the direction of travel in the transverse wave, and parallel to it in the longitudinal wave.
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