No. surface waves on the surface of water is transverse in nature. It has crests and troughs. Compression and rarefaction will be in longitudinal wave. example sound waves.
The three types of seismic waves are: P waves S waves Surface waves ( two surface waves. Riley surface wave and love surface wave named after scientists
p wave comes first s wave comes next and last comes surface wave.
surface waves because p waves and s waves are way faster so here is how it goes from fastest to slowest: is p wave and then s wave and then surface waves
The two main categories of seismic waves are body waves and surface waves. Body waves can travel through the earth's inner layers, but surface waves can only move along the surface of the Earth.
# Types of Waves that Travel Through the Earth's Surface * P waves arrive first and vibrate energy back and forth * S waves arrive second and shake side to side and up and down * Surface waves arrive last when an earthquake has occurred, they last the longest, are the most violent from the surface
First, it's not called compression wave but a longitudinal wave, second, neither and both because it's a mix of both. For it looks like a transvers, but moves in circles like a longitudinal wave.
Compression waves, electromagnetic waves, surface waves such as on water, and coordinated waves which you might see at a ball game as people raise and lower their arms in an orderly fashion.
Sunlight and radiowaves are examples of electromagnetic waves, which are transverse mechanical waves. Sound waves are compression waves.
No
Primary waves / compression waves / longitudinal waves.
Compression Waves
Yes
Compression waves
surface waves, raleigh waves, and long waves.
body waves and surface waves
Longitudinal Waves
Love waves and Rayleigh waves are surface waves