Transverse waves have particles that vibrate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. This means that the particles move up and down or side to side as the wave travels forward. Examples of transverse waves include electromagnetic waves like light and water waves.
This describes a transverse wave. In a transverse wave, the particles of the medium vibrate perpendicular to the direction the wave is moving. Examples include light waves, waves on a string, and electromagnetic waves.
Transverse waves are a type of wave where the particles vibrate perpendicular to the wave direction. This means that the particles move from side to side or up and down as the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include light waves and electromagnetic waves.
Transverse waves are a type of wave in which the disturbance moves perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer. This means that the particles of the medium vibrate in a direction that is perpendicular to the direction the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include light waves, water waves, and seismic S-waves.
Transverse waves cause the medium to vibrate perpendicular to the direction of the wave. Examples of transverse waves include light waves and electromagnetic waves.
Transverse waves have particles that vibrate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. This means that the particles move up and down or side to side as the wave travels forward. Examples of transverse waves include electromagnetic waves like light and water waves.
This describes a transverse wave. In a transverse wave, the particles of the medium vibrate perpendicular to the direction the wave is moving. Examples include light waves, waves on a string, and electromagnetic waves.
Up to a crest, then down through a trough, then back. APEX :P
Transverse waves are a type of wave where the particles vibrate perpendicular to the wave direction. This means that the particles move from side to side or up and down as the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include light waves and electromagnetic waves.
Transverse waves are a type of wave in which the disturbance moves perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer. This means that the particles of the medium vibrate in a direction that is perpendicular to the direction the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include light waves, water waves, and seismic S-waves.
Transverse waves cause the medium to vibrate perpendicular to the direction of the wave. Examples of transverse waves include light waves and electromagnetic waves.
S waves are transverse waves, which means the particles in the medium vibrate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. This is in contrast to P waves, which are longitudinal waves where the particles vibrate parallel to the wave direction.
Polarized waves.
The two types of mechanical waves are transverse waves and longitudinal waves. In transverse waves, the particles of the medium vibrate perpendicular to the direction of the wave's propagation, while in longitudinal waves, the particles vibrate parallel to the direction of the wave's propagation.
Longitudinal waves consist particles in a medium (ex of a medium= air) vibrate back and forth in a parallel direction to the direction of the wave is traveling. Example of a longitudinal wave are sound waves. Boom! Opposite of longitudinal waves would be a transverse wave where instead of particles moving in a parallel direction, transverse waves vibrate in a medium, side by side perpendicular to the direction the wave travels to. Example of a transverse wave is a light wave. Hope this helped =]
Transverse waves have particles that vibrate perpendicular to the direction of the wave's motion. Longitudinal waves have particles that vibrate in the same direction that the wave is moving.
Longitudinal wave. (as opposed to Transverse waves, where the vibrations are perpendicular to the direction of movement.)