There are no waves that are specifically called "volcanic waves"; however, a volcanic eruption can of course cause seismic waves. These can be longitudinal or transverse.
Sound waves are longitudinal.
Radio wave is not a longitudinal wave it is a transverse wave
Longitudinal Wave
A sound wave is indeed a longitudinal wave as opposed to a transverse wave
A longitudinal wave is a wave of which the disturbance direction is the same direction of the direction of the wave. Waves done in a spring and sound waves are an example. A longitudinal wave: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Sound, at least in gases like air, can only propagate as a longitudinal wave.
A wave must be transverse or longitudinal or both.
If the particles of the medium vibrate in the direction of propagation of wave, as in sound waves that's why sound waves are called longitudinal waves.
No, a sound wave is a compressional wave.
When you have the complete compression and rarefaction of a longitudinal wave, that is one complete wave.
a wave in which matter is moved back and forth in the direction the wave is moving
Longitudinal (also called compression) wave