There is no such thing as cold radiation. Cold is nothing in itself; it is merely the absence of heat - or just less heat. Heat, like light, radiates, but cold, like darkness, does not.
What you may think of is cold convection; i.e., the fact that cold air will sink and warm air will rise. This effect is often confused as being 'cold radiation'.
transverse waves are waves that go up and down
Radiation
Radiation can travel through empty space in the form of electromagnetic waves or particles. It can transfer energy and potentially ionize atoms or molecules it interacts with, which can pose health risks or be harnessed for various applications such as medical imaging or communication technologies.
YES! The sun is a prime example of this. If they couldn't we would freeze.
S-waves go up and down while P--waves go back and fourth.
Electromagnetic waves include radio waves, microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, x-rays, gamma rays.All of these are really the same thing (at least, for a physicist); the difference is in frequency, and the amount of energy per photon.
no because it killed to many innocent people in japan and the radiation waves never go away
No
Because the alcohol is pressed in something cold the molecules making it go down
The radiation emitted by Earth's surface has longer wavelengths compared to solar radiation. Earth emits long-wave radiation in the infrared range, while solar radiation consists of shorter-wave radiation in the visible and ultraviolet ranges.
go outside of the super market and then go down and you'll see the path to cold storage
No, it rises.