Yes - the handset and the base-station send radio waves to each other to maintain the conversation.
The cord phone is connected by using a series of fiberoptical wires; whereas a cordless phone's service comes, from towers, through waves.
radio waves radiation
It uses radio waves. The frequency band is the same as some cordless telephones.
A cordless phone is frequently based on radio waves. These are transmitted from the base unit to the handset in use. A standard scanner can pick up these calls depending on frequency. Most phone systems are now moving to digital technology to prevent monitor. Therefore a normal cardless phone will not be hacked as it doesnt contain the same electronic components as a mobile or computer
No they do not they use radio waves because they need to travel alot shorter distances.
No, AM radio waves are an example of transverse waves. Longitudinal waves have the oscillation of particles in the direction of wave propagation, while transverse waves have the oscillation of particles perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation.
sound
They travel just like the radio waves that make your car radio work. They are sent from a transmitter - and picked up by your phone - the phone sends radio waves back to the transmitter to complete the circuit.
Yes...it is possible...im not sure how...i just know that it is because it happend to me but i had picked up my phone and heard her conversation but she couldn't hear me... Cordless phones use radio waves to communicate between the base and the handset. If you neighbor's phone happens to use the same frequency/channel at the same time there could be a connection between both conversations. It happened more often with older models, but shouldn't happen with models made in recent years. People with radio scanners may be able to monitor the frequencies that some cordless phones use, but that too is less likely to happen with newer cordless systems.
It is true.
radio waves
Here you go:MicrowavesRadio/phone mastsTV remotes