Only waves in liquids.
Wave Rock is shaped like a tall ocean wave. It has cultural significance to the Aborigines with over 140,000 tourists every year visiting the Wave Rock.
A wave is what is in water like when water is moving, and the scientific definition is a wave transvers energy from one place to another.
That a loop is curved and a whorl is shaped like a wave.
No, a water wave is a surface wave that involves the transfer of energy through the movement of water particles in a circular motion. It is not a compression wave, which involves the propagation of compression and rarefaction regions through a medium, like in sound waves.
in a heat wave your brain recoqnizes that its a "wave" of heat and then (because its dehydrated usually) imagines the image in a wave like form
Yes the speed of a wave does depend on the source.
No, eletromagnetic waves propagate in two planes (eletro-magnetic) and can propagate in a vacuum. Water waves, on the other hand, are dependant on matter to transfer energy, making it a mechanical wave, not an eletromagnetic one.
A water wave is a mechanical wave that travels on the surface of a body of water, transferring energy through the oscillation of particles in the water. It is a transverse wave, with the particles of water moving perpendicular to the direction of the wave.
Water is not a wave but a substance!
i don't care look it up thats the way i huh huh i like it
They could, but it is unlikely that humans will, other than just admiring it. It is a 110 meter long granite cliff shaped like a wave in Australia that is a tourist attraction.
It generally doesn't - only energy is propagated, not matter. Yea, they told me that, but I got wet. The water doesn't travel as much as the energy in a compressive wave. But an ocean water wave, especially near shore, looks a lot like a transverse wave.