In any field, stationary means unmoving and won't be moving.
In any field, stationary means unmoving and won't be moving.
A standing or stationary wave are two waves that are moving in opposite directions. The two waves must have the same frequency and amplitude. Standing waves don't travel anywhere and have finite boundaries.
Here are some words that mean the opposite of stationary: active, mobile, moving, restless, unfixed, unsteady.
If by "the laws of physics" you mean to include quantum mechanics, then yes. If you mean purely Newtonian physics, then they imply the exact opposite.
A car usually remains stationary, when parked, as the hand-brake has been put on.
Stationary mean "not moving" so it must mean the the position is not moving or stay the same place.
In any field, stationary means unmoving and won't be moving.
As in science physics.
A standing or stationary wave are two waves that are moving in opposite directions. The two waves must have the same frequency and amplitude. Standing waves don't travel anywhere and have finite boundaries.
static - stationary, standing, not moving
Here are some words that mean the opposite of stationary: active, mobile, moving, restless, unfixed, unsteady.
If by "the laws of physics" you mean to include quantum mechanics, then yes. If you mean purely Newtonian physics, then they imply the exact opposite.
What does mean to take about the nature and scope of physics
Microwaves are in motion. If that qualifies as "progressive" then they are progressive. The are not stationary as any wave that carries energy wants to move. We can talk about something called "standing waves" in physics, but that's not the same thing. Microwave progress out from the point where they originate.
A car usually remains stationary, when parked, as the hand-brake has been put on.
Stationary has a couple of meanings. it can mean not moving, or a type of letter paper. " John, go buy me some stationary so i can write to your uncle" or " That fridge is stationary"
Static means 'stationary', or 'not moving'.