An earthquake.
Light waves are transverse waves. This means that the oscillation of the wave is perpendicular to the direction of energy propagation.
A surface wave is a type of wave that exhibits characteristics of both transverse and longitudinal waves. It travels along the boundary between two different materials, such as air and water, or between two layers of the same material moving at different speeds. An example of a surface wave is a water wave at the surface of the ocean.
A longitudinal wave is a wave where the particles of the medium move parallel to the direction of the wave propagation, like compressions and rarefactions in a spring. A transverse wave is a wave where the particles of the medium move perpendicularly to the direction of wave propagation, like the motion of a string being plucked.
Light waves are transverse waves, meaning the oscillations of the wave occur perpendicular to the direction the wave is traveling. This is in contrast to longitudinal waves, where the oscillations occur parallel to the direction of wave propagation.
You can increase the amplitude of a longitudinal wave by increasing the energy or force that is causing the wave to propagate. This will result in higher density or compression regions in the wave, which increases its amplitude.
It is a tranverse wave. hope this helps
Sound waves are longitudinal.
Crest
electromagnetic, transverse
A compression wave is another name for a longitudinal wave.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave.
When an incoming wave combines with a reflected wave in such a way that the combined wave appears to be standing still the result is a standing still wave.