Waves Basics Flashcards
Describe, generally, what waves do.
They transfer energy in the direction they are travelling without transferring matter
Waves can be either transverse or longitudinal.
State one similarity between longitudinal and transverse waves.
Any one from:
- They both transfer energy but not matter
- They both have a wavelength/frequency/speed
Describe one difference between longitudinal and transverse waves.
- In transverse waves, the vibrations are perpendicular to the direction the wave travels
- In longitudinal waves, the vibrations are parallel to the direction the wave travels
Give some examples of transverse waves.
- All electromagnetic waves
- S-waves (a seismic wave)
- Ripples and waves in water
Give some examples of longitudinal waves.
- Sound waves
- P-waves (a seismic wave)
(Exam-style question)
Explain, with evidence, that with sound waves it’s the wave and not the air itself that travels.
- When sound waves move through the air to a person’s ear, the air itself does not move
- Sound is transferred via vibrating particles, which stay where they are and vibrate about a fixed point - our eardrums vibrate with the particles
(Exam-style question)
Ripples pass a leaf on a pond after a child throws a stone into it.
Explain why the ripples do not carry the leaf to the edge of the pond.
- Although the ripples travel across the pond, the water just travels up and down
- Therefore, the ripples cannot move the leaf across the pond
Recall the parts of a transverse wave on a diagram.
What is meant by the term ‘frequency’?
The number of complete cycles of a wave passing a certain point per second
(1Hz is 1 wave per second)
What is meant by the term ‘wavelength’?
The length of a full cycle of a wave
(e.g. from crest to crest, or from compression to compression)
What is the equation to calculate the speed of a wave?
What is meant by the ‘amplitude’ of a wave?
The displacement from the rest position to a crest or trough
What is meant by the ‘period’ of a wave?
The time taken for a full cycle of the wave to pass a point
(Period = 1 ÷ frequency)
What is meant by the term ‘wavefront’?
The front of the wave, or the same point on each wave
(this tends to be the crest or peak of the wave)
What is meant by the term ‘wave velocity’?
The speed at which a wave moves through a space