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Waves The Nature of Waves • A wave is a disturbance or vibration that transfers energy from one place to another. • Waves transfer energy, not matter. The water waves below are carrying energy but are not moving. Waves can only exist if they have energy to carry. For sound: When two objects hit each other or rub against each other, they begin to vibrate quickly, faster than the eye can see. This vibration shakes the air, and the vibration in the air moves outward in the form of a wave. The vibrations eventually hit your ear, and you hear the sound. Light Light is a type of electromagnetic wave. Light has both an electric field and a magnetic field. It is because of this reason that light is also referred to as electromagnetic energy. Light travels as the electric fields and magnetic fields go up and down. There are two types of waves: Compression waves are waves which require a medium. A medium is a form of matter through which the wave travels (such as water, air, glass, etc.) In a compression wave the matter in the wave moves back and forth. Transverse waves, such as light, x-rays, and other forms of radiation do not require a medium. They can travel without going through air, water, or any solid object. In a transverse wave the matter in the wave moves up and down. Examples of waves: Waves can be both compressional and transverse, like seismic waves. A seismic wave is an energy wave which vibrates through the earth’s crust as the crust bends or breaks. Seismic waves exist as both transverse and compressional waves. Some travel through the earth and some travel across the earth’s surface. What are the parts of a wave? Transverse wave The crest is the highest point on a transverse wave. The trough is the lowest point on a transverse wave. The wavelength is the distance from one point on the wave to the next corresponding point. Compressional wave On a compressional wave the area squeezed together is called the compression. The areas spread out are called the rarefaction. The wavelength is the distance from the center of one compression to the center of the next compression. What is wave frequency? Frequency is the number of waves that pass through a point in one second. The smaller the wavelength, the more times it will pass through a point in one second. The larger the wavelength, the fewer times it will pass through a point in one second. Different Frequencies in a Pendulum Wave The amplitude of a transverse wave is determined by the height of the crest. The amplitude of a compression wave is determined by the closeness of the compression. The amplitude of a wave is directly related to the energy of a wave, the larger the amplitude, the more energy in the wave. High Energy The Behavior of Waves Waves can reflect: When a wave bounces off an object and changes direction – this is reflection. Waves can refract: Refraction is the bending of a wave as it passes from one medium to another. A wave travels at different speeds in different things. When a wave traveling a certain speed moves into another medium (like from air to water), it will either increase in speed or decrease in speed, which changes the way we see an object. Waves can diffract: Diffraction occurs when an object causes a wave to change direction and bend around it. Diffraction also occurs when waves (especially sound) pass through a small opening. They diffract and spread out as they pass through the hole. When waves run into each other, it is called interference. You can think of it as adding and subtracting waves! If they are moving the same way, you add them. If they are moving in the opposite directions, you subtract them.