Want this question answered?
Trick question. Short answer....Audio waves.
Yes, yes, and no. They can't be polarized, because their vibration is in the direction of their motion, not across it. But they also exhibit diffraction and dispersion ... almost everything you would expect from waves.
The width of the reflected wave is the same as that of the incident wave. The width of the transmitted wave depends on the electro-optical or sonic density of the second medium.
The energy in the wave is partly transmitted, partly absorbed, and partly reflected.
To compare the energy of two different waves, you measure their amplitudes
Trick question. Short answer....Audio waves.
Yes, yes, and no. They can't be polarized, because their vibration is in the direction of their motion, not across it. But they also exhibit diffraction and dispersion ... almost everything you would expect from waves.
sound waves are made by amplitudes
The width of the reflected wave is the same as that of the incident wave. The width of the transmitted wave depends on the electro-optical or sonic density of the second medium.
The energy in the wave is partly transmitted, partly absorbed, and partly reflected.
The energy in the wave is partly transmitted, partly absorbed, and partly reflected.
if wave amplitudes are equal ,will high frequency waves carry more or less energy than low frequency waves
P waves do not cause significant damage to buildings, due to their bigger amplitudes.
To compare the energy of two different waves, you measure their amplitudes
measure their amplitudes
The amplitudes add.
reflected