The peak is the high point of the wave while the low point of the wave is called the "trough" and the waves are measured in wavelengths.
The major parts of a wave are the crest (highest point of the wave), trough (lowest point of the wave), wavelength (distance between two successive crests or troughs), and amplitude (maximum displacement of a wave from its rest position).
The three parts of a wave are the crest (the highest point of the wave), the trough (the lowest point of the wave), and the wavelength (the distance between two consecutive crests or troughs).
crest
It would be its wave lengths!!
The distance between successive identical parts of a wave is called the wavelength.
In a transverse wave, the crest of the wave corresponds to the compression of a longitudinal wave, while the trough of the transverse wave corresponds to the rarefaction of a longitudinal wave. Both waves exhibit oscillation or vibration, but the direction in which the particles move is perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation in a transverse wave, while it is parallel in a longitudinal wave.
It would be its wave lengths!!
A wave is composed of an amplitude and a wavelength. A transverse wave contains oscillations perpendicular to the direction the wave is traveling, for instance, a sine wave.
The wavelength.
crest and trough. The crest is the highest point of a wave, while the trough is the lowest point.
The resulting wave's amplitude will be 8 cm (4 cm + 4 cm) when the high parts of the waves meet in phase.
I'm unable to draw images, but I can describe a common wave for you. A wave typically consists of a crest (the highest point of the wave), a trough (the lowest point of the wave), amplitude (the height of the wave from the resting position), and wavelength (the distance between two consecutive crests or troughs).