Nope, longitudinal.
longitudinal wave
All of them. Electromagnetic, sound, even a water wave until it hits shore.
ripples of water all electromagnetic waves are also transverse waves electromagnetic waves include: gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet rays, visible light, infrared waves, microwaves & radio waves Hiya 3/5
It is not "transfer". it has to be " Transverse" wave. When the particles of the medium does vibrations simple harmonically perpendicular to the direction of motion of the wave then it is said to be transverse wave. Even electromagnetic wave too is a transverse wave as its electric and magnetic omponents are normal to the direction of propagation.
intensity
Sound waves are longitudinal waves, not transverse waves.
Yes, sound waves are longitudinal in nature, not transverse.
Sound is a compressional wave.
Light is an electromagnetic wave; and those are transverse. Sound is usually a longitudinal wave.
transverse
light waves or electromagnetic waves are transverse and sound waves are longitudinal
Longitudnal waves and Transverse Waves
Sound waves are transverse in nature because the particles in the medium vibrate perpendicular to the direction of the wave propagation.
Waves are often classified as transverse or longitudinal. The sideways vibrations of a string and the surface waves on water are a good examples of transverse waves. Sound waves in fluids (e.g. sound in air, sound traveling under water) are examples of longitudinal waves. In solids, you can have both transverse and longitudinal waves.
Sound waves are longitudinal waves, where the particles of the medium vibrate parallel to the direction of the wave. Light waves, on the other hand, are transverse waves, where the oscillation is perpendicular to the direction of wave travel.
Ultraviolet waves are part of the Electromagnetic Spectrum which all travel as transverse waves.
Sound waves are longitudinal waves, meaning they travel by compressing and expanding the medium they pass through, such as air. This is different from transverse waves, like light waves, which oscillate perpendicular to their direction of travel. Sound waves are unique as transverse waves because they require a medium to travel through, such as air, water, or solids, whereas transverse waves can travel through a vacuum.