Light and sound travel in waves as do microwaves.
The general term for what a wave travels through is a medium, but in the case of earthquakes the wave travels through the ground.
The speed of a wave is how far the wave travels in one unit of time.
That is a longitudinal wave.
If the medium vibrates in a transverse wave with twice the force at right angles to the direction the wave travels, it means the amplitude of the wave is doubled in that direction. If the wave also travels parallel to the direction it moves with half the energy, it means that the wave carries less energy forward because some of the energy is directed towards vibrating the medium at right angles.
The speed at which a wave travels through a medium depends on the properties of the medium. In general, the denser the medium, the faster the wave will travel. The speed of a wave can also be influenced by factors like temperature, pressure, and elasticity of the medium.
The material through which a wave travels is called the medium.
A body wave is a seismic wave that travels through Earths interior.
A tsunami wave is a wave of energy that travels through water, while a seismic wave is a wave of energy that travels through earth.
Up to a crest, then down through a trough, then back. APEX :P
How quickly the wave travels
A tsunami wave is a wave of energy that travels through water, while a seismic wave is a wave of energy that travels through earth.
It does not, it travels as a wave