atraction
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoWater waves are formed by the force of the wind agianst the water and air goes forward and finally develops a circular motion. This motion causes a pressure to go down on the surface at its front, and pressure going up and this causes the surface to take on the form of a wave.
Ocean waves are transverse waves because they move up and down.
Not very well, because they're different types of waves. They have some similar properties, but water waves are transverse waves (the water goes up and down, perpendicular to the direction of travel) and sound waves are longitudinal waves (the air vibrates parallel to the direction of travel).
Well . . . boats, shallow swimmers and fish, and energy can all do that.
The transfer of energy in the form of rays or waves is either Conduction or Convection..... I get those two mixed up. :P
They typically form on steep beaches and tend to be more erosive.
No, it doesn't.
They form at high places and when snow piles up after a while they begin to build up eventually making an alpine glacier.
Jwar bhata
With water or oceanic currents, the currents which move close to the surface of the sea are called surface currents. In such currents, wind acts on the water and the water piles up to form strong movement forces.
Water waves are formed by the force of the wind agianst the water and air goes forward and finally develops a circular motion. This motion causes a pressure to go down on the surface at its front, and pressure going up and this causes the surface to take on the form of a wave.
Water waves are known as transverse waves because the motion of the water is up and down, or at right angles to the direction in which the waves are traveling. You can see this by observing a cork bobbing up and down on water as the waves pass by; the cork moves very little in a sideways direction.
it piles up and stops some of the flow for water
Ocean waves are transverse waves because they move up and down.
Not very well, because they're different types of waves. They have some similar properties, but water waves are transverse waves (the water goes up and down, perpendicular to the direction of travel) and sound waves are longitudinal waves (the air vibrates parallel to the direction of travel).
Rubble is the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up. This word is never inflected for plural. It's customary to indicate its plural form with the measure word "piles of," as in "piles of rubble." (Grammarians call words that are invariably singular in form "singulare tantum")
Well . . . boats, shallow swimmers and fish, and energy can all do that.