You don't create it, you feel it. Your index finger rests gently on the radial artery.
Creating a pulse with your hand involves moving your hand in a rhythmic, repetitive motion. This can be achieved by quickly opening and closing your hand or squeezing and releasing your fingers in a rhythmic manner. The motion should be steady and consistent to create a distinct pulse.
As you create a pulse, your hand moves back and forth in a rhythmic manner, generating a wave-like motion. This movement involves flexing and extending your fingers and wrist, creating a controlled and continuous action to produce the desired pulse.
The motion of the hand when creating a pulse involves quickly closing and opening the fingers or fist in a rhythmic manner. This movement creates a series of pressure waves that propagate through the medium, such as air or water, resulting in the perception of a pulsating sensation.
They go together hand in hand.
Left hand
The motion of my hand as I create the pulse is a rhythmic movement involving flexing and extending my fingers in a controlled manner. By striking a surface or squeezing an object in a coordinated way, I produce the pulse in a steady and consistent pattern.
Put your thumb of the opposite hand at the outer edge of the other wrist just below where the hand connects to the wrist, under the thumb, you should feel a pulse there.
To calculate the speed of a pulse in a slinky, you can measure the distance the pulse travels and the time it takes to travel that distance. The speed of the pulse is the distance divided by the time. This can be done by creating a pulse at one end of the slinky and timing how long it takes for the pulse to reach the other end.
Pulse is a beating noise in your hand and lower ear. Without pulse you will die.
The hand moves in a rhythmic pattern with the fingers gently squeezing and releasing in a controlled manner to create the pulse. The movement is usually repetitive and coordinated to generate a consistent beat.
You can check in your hand foot and arm
You can take the pulse on the left hand side of the neck (towards the front of the neck) or on the wrist, but most common place to take a pulse is on the neck.