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WAVES.

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Presentation on theme: "WAVES."— Presentation transcript:

1 WAVES

2 WAVES a disturbance that transfers energy
Carries energy from one place to another Classified by what they move through Mechanical Waves the energy is transferred by vibrations of medium (medium = matter) ex/ ocean waves move through water Electromagnetic waves (EM Waves) the energy moves through disturbances in the electromagnetic field. Physics The act or process of propagating, especially the process by which a disturbance, such as the motion of electromagnetic or sound waves, is transmitted through a medium such as air or water. A medium is a substance or material which carries the wave

3 WAVE STRUCTURE CREST (peak) AMPLITUDE resting to max peak WAVELENGTH
TROUGH

4 MECHANICAL WAVES require a medium (the material through which the disturbance is moving) to transmit energy travel through & gradually lose energy to that medium Examples: water, sound, rope, & spring waves Mechanical Media: water, air, rope, spring Making a pulse WATCH THE VIDEO!!!

5 MECHANICAL WAVES Classified by how medium vibrates
                        Classified by how medium vibrates Pulse = direction of energy transfer Vibration = direction of vibration of medium relative to pulse 3 types: Longitudinal, transverse, surface

6 MECHANICAL WAVES Classified by how medium vibrates Longitudinal Waves:
Vibration is in the same direction as wave pulse (parallel to wave pulse) Transverse Waves: Vibration is at 900 (right angles) to wave pulse Surface Waves: Vibration is circular Ex/ Ocean waves; surface waves

7 TRANVERSE WAVES Sideways or up & down Examples:
            Vibration is perpendicular to the direction of the motion of the wave Sideways or up & down Examples: S-type earthquake waves Electromagnetic (EM) or light waves

8 LONGITUDINAL WAVES Vibration is parallel to the direction of the motion of the wave Back and forth (compression & rarefraction) Also called compression or pressure wave Examples: P-type earthquake waves Sound waves Rarefraction (expansion) Compression

9 Waves describe the Earth
P waves move through solids & liquids P waves move through solids & liquids S waves move through solids only!!! Are these MECHANICAL WAVES???? YES!! Seismic waves need a medium (the earth!)

10 CHARACTERISTICS OF WAVES
Waves are described according to their Amplitude measures DISPLACEMENT size of the disturbance Wavelength  distance of a “repeating unit” Also called a cycle Velocity v speed = how fast wave travels

11 AMPLITUDE Distance between “rest & crest” or “rest & trough”
Gives indication of “power” or “strength” of wave (magnitude of earthquake = Richter scale) Does not affect velocity of wave Determines loudness (sound) or brightness (EM wave)

12 WAVELENGTH  Distance between any two repeating points on a wave crest-crest, trough-trough, expansion-expansion, compression-compression Determines what colors we see; what notes we hear (pitch) Shorter wavelengths have more cycles per minute because they aren’t as long

13 VELOCITY v the rate at which the energy travels; speed & direction
Depends on medium Mechanical waves travel faster through dense mediums EM Waves are faster through less dense mediums

14 Frequency ƒ How often number of wavelengths that pass any point per second measured in wavelengths/second or cycles/second Hertz (Hz) = number of wavelengths in 1 second Frequency is related to velocity: v = ƒ 

15 PERIOD T How long Amount of time for one wavelength to pass a point Related inversely to frequency Period = 1 Frequency When an event occurs repeatedly, then we say that the event is periodic and refer to the time for the event to repeat itself as the period. 1 = T f

16 Internet resources To test how well you understand go to When an event occurs repeatedly, then we say that the event is periodic and refer to the time for the event to repeat itself as the period.


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