Ripples on the surface of a pond are an example of wave motion.
Sound and Water-Ripples.
Ripples on a pond who encounter a large rock in the water will reflect off the rock. The medium for a ripple in a pond is the water.
Ripples are just waves of energy moving outward from a central focal point or origin. Since the energy moves at the same rate or speed on all sides, away from the center, the ripples appear round (since a circle is a continuous line of equal distance around a center point).
sound is actually vibrations. your eardrum is designed to pick up these vibrations that we call sound. kind of like when you have a glass of water on the table, and then drop something on the table, the glass of water picks up these vibrations and creates ripples.
Cause it fills the container/space that its in-eventually. if you look at really old glass you will see that its thicker at the bottom than the top, and it will have little sort of ripples in it. but i mean seriously it takes forever.
wind creates ripples in the sand
Windows that are very old often show this rippling effect for two reasons. First, while glass appears to be solid, but it is more along the lines of being a liquid with a very hard surface tension. Over very long periods of time, it 'flows' and ripples. The second is that when glass was made prior to the relatively modern techniques, it was very difficult to make sheets of glass, and the ripples are the results of the method of manufacture, being unable to press or roll the sheets of glass smoothly in its hot state.
Ripples - 1967 was released on: USA: 1967
Ripples on the surface of a pond are an example of wave motion.
What is it called when rock layers form folds or ripples
Fire Ripples - 2014 was released on: USA: 2014
The Ripples - 2003 TV was released on: USA: 2003
Ripples - 2009 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13
Ripples - 2012 was released on: USA: 20 May 2012
That depends on what you mean by ripples at the beginning of time. If you are referring to inflation of the universe caused by the Big Bang, and the subsequent "ripples", then those ripples are the leftover, background radiation from the event. If you are referring to ripples in space-time, then it still could have multiple meanings. Space itself can "ripple" in a wave-like fashion when affected by gravity.
When a wine glass "sings" or produces a sound, it is typically due to the glass vibrating at a specific frequency when tapped lightly. The size, shape, and thickness of the glass all play a role in creating this resonant frequency that produces the singing sound.