Waves can be classified as mechanical or electromagnetic, depending on how they propagate. Mechanical waves require a medium to travel through, while electromagnetic waves can travel through a vacuum. Both types of waves can also be classified based on their shape, such as transverse waves, longitudinal waves, or surface waves.
Light waves originate from a light source, such as the sun, a light bulb, or a laser. When an object absorbs energy, it can emit photons, which are the elementary particles of light that travel as electromagnetic waves.
Light waves are electromagnetic in nature, while sound waves are mechanical vibrations of particles. This means that light waves do not require a medium to travel through, while sound waves require a medium such as air, water, or solids to propagate.
Light waves are electromagnetic waves that can travel through vacuum, while sound waves are mechanical waves that require a medium to propagate. Light waves travel at the speed of light (in vacuum), while sound waves travel at a much slower speed. Light waves are transverse waves, while sound waves are longitudinal waves.
Light waves can be expressed mathematically as either oscillating waves, rotating waves, pulsating waves or transient waves. It is up to the scientist to come up with a working model for the physical phenomena.
The seven electromagnetic waves are radio waves, microwaves, infrared light, visible light, ultraviolet light, X-rays, and gamma rays. These waves differ in their wavelengths and frequencies, with each having unique properties and applications.
Electromagnetic waves are classified based on their wavelength and frequency. The electromagnetic spectrum ranges from radio waves (longest wavelength, lowest frequency) to gamma rays (shortest wavelength, highest frequency), with categories in between such as microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, and X-rays. Each category has distinct properties and applications.
waves are classified according to how they move. the three types of waves are transversed waves, longitudinal waves, and surface waves
They are tranverse waves.
Energetic waves are waves that carry energy through a medium or space, such as light, sound, or electromagnetic radiation. They can be classified based on their frequency, wavelength, and amplitude. Examples include radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays.
This statement is incorrect. Waves on a rope are transverse waves because the particles of the medium (the rope) vibrate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. Light waves, on the other hand, are electromagnetic waves that are classified as transverse waves because the electric and magnetic fields oscillate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation.
Polarized light is classified based on the orientation of its electric and magnetic fields in the light wave. This property is used in applications such as 3D movie glasses and glare reduction sunglasses to filter out specific orientations of light waves.
They are classified according to their wavelength.
There are several types of waves, including mechanical waves (such as water waves and seismic waves), electromagnetic waves (such as light and radio waves), and matter waves (such as those associated with particles at the quantum level). Each type of wave carries energy in different forms and exhibits different behaviors.
A wave is a disturbance that moves through matter or space by transferring energy without transferring matter. Waves can be classified as mechanical waves, such as sound waves and water waves, or electromagnetic waves, like light and radio waves.
There are not 7 electromagnetic waves. EM is a continuous spectrum. However, EM waves can be classified by their wavelength Radio waves Infra Red Visible Light Ultra Violet Microwaves x-rays gamma-rays (note x-rays and gamma rays are classified by the origin , not by wavelength, however in practice, gamma rays are higher frequency)
No, electromagnetic waves are classified as transverse waves. In a transverse wave, the oscillation of the wave is perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer. Longitudinal waves, on the other hand, have oscillations parallel to the direction of energy transfer.