Applying a force at the same rate as the natural frequency will cause resonance. If both the frequencies coincide with each other, they form a wave of double the amplitude. If the crest of one frequency and the trough of the other meet, they cancel out each other and the displacement is 0.
when one object tries to force the natural frequency of itself into the other object and the other object already has the same natural frequency, they resonate. for example, if red light approuches a red wall, the red light tries to get the red wall to vibrate at the same natural frequncie but the pigments in the wall already make it the same natural frequency so they resonate.
because you need to know how rocks are smart
no
energy
Yes!
A diamond may resonate emotionally, but you cannot vibrate a diamond in the sense that to resonate is to "...produce or be filled with a deep, full, reverberating sound."
A basic physics answer for this is that a net force (or unbalanced force) will cause an object to accelerate, that is, cause the object to change its speed and/or direction.
Turn!!
energy
For something to resonate, it needs a force to pull it back to its starting position and enough energy to keep it vibrating.
Yes!
A sound that bounces off of an object that allows other sounds to resonate.
Pavarotti's voice seemed to resonate endlessly in that cathedral.
A diamond may resonate emotionally, but you cannot vibrate a diamond in the sense that to resonate is to "...produce or be filled with a deep, full, reverberating sound."
Mass does not cause an object to fall faster.
I heard my sound resonate many times in the valley
A basic physics answer for this is that a net force (or unbalanced force) will cause an object to accelerate, that is, cause the object to change its speed and/or direction.
"leadership is cause; everything else is effect" Discuss
The resonant frequency of that note was 440 Hz.
Here is an example sentence for 'resonate':The yodel resonated in the Alps until it faded away into the distance.