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Types of Waves Foldable
Foldable Directions
 2x2 Foldable
 Definitions on the flap
 Example waves in the middle
Electromagnetic Waves
 Waves which can travel through the vacuum of outer space; no
medium needed
 Ex. Light waves, X-rays, Radio waves
 An electromagnetic wave transports its energy through a vacuum
at a speed of 3.00 x 10^8 m/s
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Sound Waves
 Mechanical wave
 Typically, this medium is air
 At the source, there’s some vibrating object capable of disturbing
the first particle of the medium
 Transported from one location to another by means of particle-toparticle interaction
 Longitudinal wave
Seismic Waves
 Waves of energy caused by the sudden breaking of rock within the
earth or an explosion
 Two types
 Body waves travel through the earth's inner layers
 Surface waves can only move along the surface of the planet like ripples on
water
Body Waves
 P-waves
 Fastest kind of seismic wave
 The first to 'arrive'
 Can move through solid rock and fluids, like water or the liquid layers of the earth.
 Pushes and pulls the rock it moves through just like sound waves push and pull the air
 S-waves
 Second wave you feel
 Can only move through solid rock, not through any liquid medium.
 S-waves move rock particles up and down, or side-to-side--perpendicular to the direction that the
wave is traveling in
Body Waves cont’d.
Surface Waves
 Love waves
 Named after A.E.H. Love, a British mathematician who worked out the mathematical model for
this kind of wave in 1911
 Fastest surface wave and moves the ground from side-to-side
 Confined to the surface of the crust; Love waves produce entirely horizontal motion
 Rayleigh Waves
 Named for John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh, who mathematically predicted the existence of this
kind of wave in 1885
 It moves the ground up and down, and side-to-side in the same direction that the wave is
moving.
 Most of the shaking felt from an earthquake is due to the Rayleigh wave, which can be much
larger than the other waves
Surface Waves cont’d.
Water Waves
 Combination of both longitudinal and transverse motions
 The particles travel in clockwise circles
 The radius of the circles decreases as the depth into the water increases