idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
In a spring, squeezing some coils together more tightly causes the nearby coils to be more spread apart. So this is how it increases.
idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
In a spring, squeezing some coils together more tightly causes the nearby coils to be more spread apart
If the amplitude of a wave changes, the intensity of the wave also changes. The intensity of a wave is directly proportional to the square of its amplitude. So, as the amplitude increases, the intensity increases as well.
In a spring, squeezing some coils together more tightly causes the nearby coils to be more spread apart. So this is how it increases.
idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
idk because im doin homework right now and i have no clue what to put down
For example, when you have a spring you pull it, and some of it is tight together, and some is spread out. The spread out part is called a Rarefaction and the tight part is compression. The direction it moves is movement of wave, and the opposite side is the movement of coil.
If the amplitude of compression waves traveling along the spring increases, the spacing between coils of the spring will decrease. This is because the increased energy from the compression waves causes the coils to compress and come closer together. In essence, the increased amplitude results in a more compacted spring configuration.
The wave in which amplitude changes to create sound is called an acoustic wave. As the amplitude of the wave increases, the sound produced becomes louder, and as the amplitude decreases, the sound becomes softer. This change in amplitude is what creates the variations in volume or intensity in sound waves.