A guitar is a far more complex structure than a tuning fork, and has more harmonics. The whole design of a tuning fork is intended to give as simple and pure a sound as possible, since that is the easiest type of sound to use when you are trying to tune an instrument. You wouldn't want harmonics in a tuning fork.
The frequency of vibration depends on several factors with length being an important one. Stiffness and shape are some others.
Not really. The standard ukulele tuning is very different then a guitar. The bass ukulele could be tuned from a bass guitar.
that's standard tuning but a little bit lower, so .. get your tuner if you have one and its just like this. Thickest to thinnest of course for strings in flats Eb Ab Db Gb Bb Eb in sharps (Same thing) D# G# C# F# A# D# 11-49 blues strings or 12-52 heavy metal strings I highly recommend this tuning, if you're ever uncertain about a tuning wikipedia guitar tunings they have EVERYTHING there.
"Concert" tuning is the same on standard electric and acoustic guitars: EADGBE. No one says you can't tune either type of guitar to something else. However, there are multiple types of electric and acoustic guitars, for example: - 12-string guitar (EADGBE, then EADG high octaves and BE unison strings) - 7-string guitar (BEADGBE, or EADGBE with high-octave G) - baritone guitar (BEADGB) - tenor guitar (CGDA, DGBE and other variations) - Nashville tuning (EADGBE, but with EADG as high octaves -- basically a 12-string without the "normal" strings) - short-scale guitar (eg. Tacoma Papoose, which is tuned ADGCEA)
The tuning fork produces sound waves when it vibrates in air.
A guitar is a far more complex structure than a tuning fork, and has more harmonics. The whole design of a tuning fork is intended to give as simple and pure a sound as possible, since that is the easiest type of sound to use when you are trying to tune an instrument. You wouldn't want harmonics in a tuning fork.
Non uniform
Both. Periodic motion refers to any motion that repeats itself periodically. The oscillatory motion exhibited by swinging of arms is one type of periodic motion. Orbital motion of a planet is another type of periodic motion. The motion of a spring is another type, etc.
The frequency of vibration depends on several factors with length being an important one. Stiffness and shape are some others.
A freely falling body exhibits uniform acceleration motion due to the force of gravity acting on it. This means that the body's speed increases by the same amount every second as it falls towards the Earth.
The ball exhibits projectile motion, which consists of both horizontal and vertical components. Initially, the ball moves upward against gravity, and then it starts falling back down due to the force of gravity.
A matchbox is a cuboid or hexahedron.
Bilateral symmetry :)
If by motion you mean velocity it is non uniform, because the velocity is changing due the acceleration of gravity slowing it down to zero. Then at the maximum height motion is reversed and it accelerates downward back to its original speed but in the opposite direction.
There are many types and makes of engine in fork trucks
An object thrown up from the surface of the Earth exhibits ballistic or projectile motion. Actually, it doesn't matter where it's "thrown" from; any object which accelerates only due to gravity follows a curve that's a conic section. This can be a circle, an ellipse, a parabola, or a hyperbola (technically, one branch of a hyperbola) depending on its initial velocity and starting position, and all of these are considered "ballistic" trajectories.