light
mainly electromagnetic radiation, heat and light, but with a dash of radio waves and particles as well.Gravity waves should exist as well, but we yet have the apparatus to reliably detect them.
Electrons have dual properties.
No, radiation can exist as electromagnetic waves (such as gamma rays or X-rays) which do not require particles to propagate. However, radioactive materials can emit particles such as alpha or beta particles along with electromagnetic radiation.
mainly electromagnetic radiation, heat and light, but with a dash of radio waves and particles as well.Gravity waves should exist as well, but we yet have the apparatus to reliably detect them.
Light exhibits characteristics of both waves and particles. This duality is known as wave-particle duality and is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics. Depending on the experimental setup, light can behave as either waves or particles.
Electrons exhibit characteristics of both waves and particles, known as wave-particle duality. They can behave as waves in certain experiments and as particles in others.
The electromagnetic spectrum exist in a wave/particle duality. Sometimes it is 'easier' to consider them waves, other times as particles. It can be proven that they exist as both. Mathematically they are the same. It is beyond the scope of this website to teach the higher mathematics involved.
Transverse waves are waves in which the particles move back and forth perpendicular to the direction of the wave. Longitudinal waves are waves in which the particles move back and forth parallel to the direction of the wave. Sound waves are an example of longitudinal waves, where air particles vibrate in the same direction as the wave travels.
Electromagnetic waves can exist only at one speed.
Transverse waves move the particles of the medium perpendicular to the direction in which the waves are traveling. Longitudinal waves, on the other hand, move the particles of the medium parallel to the direction in which the waves are traveling.
Mechanical waves are produced by the vibration of particles in a medium. This vibration causes the particles to transfer energy to neighboring particles, creating a wave that propagates through the medium. Examples of mechanical waves include sound waves and seismic waves.
by the particles in the sea when they bump togheter they give power to the waves by the particles in the sea when they bump togheter they give power to the waves