They superpose.
Energy of the waves are redistributed to form a resultant wave with amplitude given by the summation of individual wave's amplitude.
If the two waves are of same frequency, speed and amplitude and travelling in opposite direction den stationary waves are form.
They superpose.
Energy of the waves are redistributed to form a resultant wave with amplitude given by the summation of individual wave's amplitude.
If the two waves are of same frequency, speed and amplitude and travelling in opposite direction den stationary waves are form.
If waves are going opposite directions: If the two waves have the same amplitude and frequency, they will cancel each other out, resulting in a flatline.
If one has a greater amplitude, it will "absorb" the smaller one and the result will be a wave with amplitude of the difference between the two original waves, going in the direction of the first wave with greater amplitude.
If they're going the same direction:
If the waves have the same frequency and phase, the will simply add on to each other, resulting in a larger wave.
If the two have the same frequency but different phase, some parts of the waves will be offset to result in a wave with different amplitude but same frequency (depending how off-phase the waves are).
If they have the same frequency and exactly opposite phases, the two will offset into a flatline.
If they have different frequency, then it will result in a completely different wave with different frequency, phase, and amplitude.
When two waves interfere, the result can be either constructive if they combine or even destructive if they cancel each other out. If both are on the same side of a string, for example, the two bumps on the string will form a bump 2x as big before the two waves seperate and keep going. If they are on oppposite sides of the string, they will cancel each other out temporarily and then keep going.
When 2 waves overlap it is called Constructive interference, which is when they combine and increase amplitude, and the other term for this decreasing is Destructive interference, when the amplitude decreases.
The waves overlap to form an interference pattern.
interference
they echo
If the earthquake occurs on land - the highest damage occurs at the epicentre (the point at which the quake starts). If the quake begins at sea - most damage is caused at coastal regions from tidal waves.
Did you mean 'constructive interferance' - where waves from more than one source meet at a point where their energies combine rather than destructively cancelling out.
A Chemical reaction occurs. But it depends on the chemicals that are combined that create results either positive or negative.
Surface waves.
Two or more atoms combine to form a molecule.
Interference
interference
interference
Constructive Interference
The correct answer is ''Interference"
Resonance.
they combine and become one magnetic field
Wave amplification
Interference
They will combine to make a single magnetic field.
When two or more waves overlap each other
When more than one wave moves through the same medium at the same time, they interfere with each other. Depending on the relative phase and amplitude of the waves, interference can result in constructive or destructive interference. Constructive interference occurs when the waves combine to form a larger amplitude wave, while destructive interference occurs when the waves cancel each other out, resulting in a smaller or no wave.