What is a mechanical wave?
They require a medium such as air or water to propagate
What is an electromagnetic wave?
Propagates in a vacum
What is a transverse wave?
The direction of energy transfer is perpendicular to the direction of vibrations e.g. water waves and electromagnetic waves e.g. light waves
What is a longitudinal wave?
The direction of energy transfer is parallel to the direction of vibrations e.g. sound waves and seismic waves
What is the amplitude of a wave?
The maximum displacement of a wave particle from its undisturbed position
What is the wavelength of a wave?
The distance between two peaks on a wave
What is the frequency of a wave?
The number of waves that pass a point in one second (Hz)
What is the period of a wave?
The time taken to complete on wave cycle (seconds)
What is a peak and trough?
2. Trough: the point of minimum displacement
What are wave pulses and continuous waves?
What do all waves undergo?
Reflection, refraction, interference and diffraction
What are the two laws of reflection?
What is refraction?
-Refraction is the change in direction, as a result int he change of speed of a wave as it crosses a boundary between two material
What laws are refraction governed by?
What is Snells law?
- 2n1 = 1/ 1n2
How do you define the refractive index?
1n2 = v1 / v2
where v1 = velocity of wave in material 1 and v2 = velocity of wave in material 2 and this defines the refractive index
Also since FREQUENCY DOES NOT CHANGE DURING REFRACTION 1n2 = lamda1/ lamda2
What is the critical angle and total internal reflection?
What happens for angles larger than the critical angle?
What is the principle of superstition?
When two waves combine the resultant displacement at a point is equal to the vector sum of the individual displacements at that point
What is phase difference?
What happens if the phase difference is zero?
The waves are in phase
What happens if the phase difference is 180 degrees (half a wavelength)?
They are completely out of phase
When are sources of waves coherent?
They maintain a constant phase difference and have the same frequency e.g. lasers
What is a wavefront?
It is a line or surface in the path of a wave motion on which all the disturbances are in phase and it is perpendicular to the direction travel of the wave