There is no precise, universally accepted definition. Typically it refers to radio waves with frequencies of up to a few hundred kilohertz.
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Transverse. Radio waves are electromagnetic waves, which are transverse.
For electromagnetic waves: thermal radiation and radio waves are pretty long. For sound waves: bass sound waves are pretty long, so is quiet. For water waves: the tides
Long answer: Radio waves, like all EM radiation, can pass through a vacuum. Short answer: Yes.
s wave L waves are called long waves A+
No. Radio waves are a type of electromagnetic waves; electroctromagnetic waves are transverse waves.
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The electromagnetic waves with the longest wavelength are called "radio waves". There is no limit to how long the wavelengths can be.
Radio waves have a far longer wavelength than visible light. The radio waves that do the cooking in your microwave oven are as long as roughly 310,000 waves of blue light placed end-to-end. The radio waves transmitted by an AM station at 1400kHz on your AM dial are roughly 550 billion times as long as blue-light waves.
Communications over long distances are economically achieved by the utilization of radio waves.
no, mechanical waves are not radio waves
Transverse. Radio waves are electromagnetic waves, which are transverse.
Everything from long radio waves up to gamma radiation
For electromagnetic waves: thermal radiation and radio waves are pretty long. For sound waves: bass sound waves are pretty long, so is quiet. For water waves: the tides
Short wavelength
Radio waves are amongst the shortest. Gamma and X rays are shorter. The long wave lengths are at the other end of the electromagnetic spectrum. These are called 'infra red,
Communications over long distances are economically achieved by the utilization of radio waves.
Radio waves ARE electromagnetic waves.