the farm the sheep and the corn
Crest and Trough Amplitude Wavelength Frequency
No, a sound wave is a compressional wave.
A sound wave is made up of three main parts: frequency, wavelength, and amplitude. Frequency refers to the number of complete cycles of the wave that pass a point in a certain amount of time. Wavelength is the distance between two consecutive points of the wave that are in phase. Amplitude is the measure of the strength or intensity of the wave.
No. A sound wave is a pressure wave.
The areas of higher pressure in a sound wave are called compressions. These regions correspond to the parts of the wave where air molecules are closer together, creating areas of increased pressure.
yes a sound wave is a Compressional wave
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
No, sound is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
The amplitude of a sound wave is the same as its volume.
A wave is what a sound LOOKS like. Loud parts of the sound would be the high part of the wave on your screen and quieter parts of a sound or song would be the small low thin parts of the wave. Wave sampling is not a very common term since most people just call it "sampling", is the method in which you would cut a "wave" or a " sound" out of a song using a computer program or mpc device so that you can use that sound for another purpose (most likely to use as a sound effect or as an instrument sound for another song). See the link below that says "wave sound" or copy and paste the url address below this. http://www.w3.org/WAI/GL/WCAG20/WD-WCAG20-TECHS/working-examples/G56Audio_4.jpg
No, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not transverse.