The four basic wave interactions are: wavelength, trough, crest, and amplitude.
gyi
Not Your Personal Army
4. coordinate system interactions
This strange is phenomenon is very probable a consequence of water molecules interactions at these temperatures.
The question itself is controversial, as we're not sure if the observer has anything to do with the wave collapse. However, once the ability to observe (or interact) with a given particle is enabled, the wave-function or probability wave of that particle peaks, or collapses into a finite quantity. As said, we're not sure if a conscious observer has anything to do with it, or if it has to do with physical interactions in and of themselves. Another opinion: The observer has nothing to do with the collapse of the wave function. It is the measurement acting on the the wave function that does the collapsing. The part about which we are uncertain (we, as in physicists) is whether nature performs the measurement before we do and we get the result, or if nature leaves the wave function as a superposition until we measure it. This is the fundamental question of Schrodinger's cat in a box paradox.
deflection
i
Hi my name is Pedro. I like tacos.
By the interactions of Electric and Magnetic fields perpendicular to it.
By the interactions of Electric and Magnetic fields perpendicular to it.
P.B Dusenberry has written: 'Wave/particle interactions in the plasma sheet' -- subject(s): Particle interactions, Boundary layer plasmas, Wave interaction, Plasma sheaths
deflection
gyi
deflection
Jack Hope has written: 'Interactions 5' 'Interactions 6' 'Interactions 4'
The Simple Basic Properties of Waves are Amplitude, Wavelength, and Frequency.
A wave is not 'reflected' when travelling into a denser medium. It may be 'refracted' if the refractive index 'n' of the medium also varies. It invariably increases with density (n is not entirely dependent on 'density', but also harmonic resonance, and the TYPE of particles (i.e. electrons or plasma may be dense but n = 1). Refraction is often considered as 'bending' but it is a 'rotation' due to atomic scattering interactions and follows Huygens Construction of multiple wavelet interactions. At a basic schoolboy level the answer sought may also be 'slowed down'.