hey travel through p waves and other ones too
Different news outlets could make use of different media elements
hi im ash and in the 8th grade. i am failing science but i know tis answer. it is absolutly positivly waves can travel through different media including solid landand water because of sound waves. (: i hope ihelped
Absorption, reflection, and refraction all influence the movement of P-waves (primary waves) as they travel through different media. Absorption can diminish wave amplitude, reducing their energy and altering their speed. Reflection occurs when P-waves encounter a boundary, causing them to bounce back, which can create seismic waves that travel in different directions. Refraction happens when P-waves pass from one medium to another with a different density, leading to a change in their velocity and direction, which can result in bending of the wave path.
Online sources are used.
Mixed Media
The general name for the different substances or materials through which a wave moves is called a medium. Waves can travel through mediums like air, water, solids such as metal, or a vacuum in the case of electromagnetic waves.
dense media
In reflection, the light waves travel within the same media and maintains the same speed but in refraction light waves travel through a different media and so their speed changes.
Air.
titi mu
Yes, sound waves can travel through different media, including solids, liquids, and gases. The speed of sound varies depending on the medium it is traveling through, with sound traveling fastest in solids and slowest in gases.
Mechanical waves, such as sound waves, travel through a medium like air, water, or solids. Electromagnetic waves, like light and radio waves, can travel through a vacuum because they do not need a medium to propagate.
The molecules must be close enough to touch. They can travel through solids, liguids, and gases.
Mechanical waves require media through which they can travel.
Sounds travel through gas by creating pressure waves that propagate through the molecules of the gas. As the pressure waves travel through the gas, they compress and rarefy the molecules, transmitting the sound energy from one point to another. Examples of gases that sound can travel through include air, carbon dioxide, and helium.
Mechanical waves can travel through mediums such as solid, liquid, and gas. They cannot travel through a vacuum because they require a physical medium for propagation.
In the same longitudinal form