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∙ 11y agoamplitude
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoThe height of a wave from the center line to a crest or trough is known as the amplitude of the wave. Amplitude represents the maximum displacement of a wave from its equilibrium position. It is a measure of the energy carried by the wave.
The crest is the highest point of a wave where the wave is at its peak height. It is the point on the wave where the upward movement is maximal.
From maximum (crest) to minimum (troth) in height.
A crest wave is the highest point of a wave where the water rises to its maximum height. This is followed by the trough, which is the lowest point between waves. Visualizing a crest wave can help understand the oscillatory motion of waves in bodies of water.
If both waves have a 3cm crest, the resulting interference would be constructive. The crests of the waves would align, leading to an amplification of the overall wave height (6cm) at that point.
The distance between a wave's crest and its trough is called the amplitude. It represents the maximum displacement of the wave from its resting position.
The crest is the highest point of a wave where the wave is at its peak height. It is the point on the wave where the upward movement is maximal.
From maximum (crest) to minimum (troth) in height.
A crest wave is the highest point of a wave where the water rises to its maximum height. This is followed by the trough, which is the lowest point between waves. Visualizing a crest wave can help understand the oscillatory motion of waves in bodies of water.
If both waves have a 3cm crest, the resulting interference would be constructive. The crests of the waves would align, leading to an amplification of the overall wave height (6cm) at that point.
we get a bigger crest
The distance between a wave's crest and its trough is called the amplitude. It represents the maximum displacement of the wave from its resting position.
No. The crest is the height of the wave. The period is the time it takes for 2 waves to pass one point. ---Only one wave, but two crests, the high and the low one. The number of waves per second is the frequency. Sage.
Longitudinal waves are waves that are produced by disturbance that is parallel to that of the direction of wave or oscillations produced along the path of the wave. The longitudinal waves consist of areas of comressions, the center of which is in a crest, and areas of rarefactions, the center of which is in a trough. Crest in a transverse wave is the part of wave at the maximum above the isoelectric line (midline) and trough is the minimum below the isoelectric line. The example of longitudinal waves is sound waves.
Near shore crest shaped waves are called "plunging waves." These waves are characterized by a curling crest that breaks forward as the wave approaches the shore.
by measuring the distance from crest to crest.
The distance between the crest of one wave and the crest of the next wave is the wavelength of the wave. It represents the length of one complete cycle of the wave, from crest to crest. It is a fundamental property of waves and is used to characterize different types of waves.
The vertical distance between trough and crest is called the height of the wave. While the crest is the highest point of a wave, the trough is the lowest point.Are you talking about waves? That simply depends on the frequency of the wave; crest and trough are just terms given to sections of waves. The crest is the top of the wave, and the trough is the bottom.It's the amplitude. Like on the drawn parts of a transverse wave. You can look it up on Google images.wave hight