Noun

waves

  1. Plural form of wave.

Verb

waves

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wave.

Anagrams

From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mon Aug 30 16:12:21 2010

In mathematics and science, a wave is a disturbance that travels through space and time, usually by the transfer of energy. Waves are described by a wave equation that can take on many forms depending on the type of wave. A mechanical wave is a wave that propagates through a medium owing to restoring forces resulting from its deformation. For example, sound waves propagate via air molecules bumping into their neighbors. This transfers some energy to these neighbors, which will cause a cascade of collisions between neighbouring molecules. When air molecules collide with their neighbors, they also bounce away from them (restoring force). This keeps the molecules from actually traveling with the wave.

Waves travel and transfer energy from one point to another, often with no permanent displacement of the particles of the medium—that is, with little or no associated mass transport. They consist instead of oscillations or vibrations around almost fixed locations. For example, a cork on rippling water will bob up and down while staying in about the same place while the wave itself moves onwards. Waves carry energy but not mass because even as a wave travels outward from the center (carrying energy of motion), the medium itself does not flow with it.

There are also waves capable of travelling through a vacuum, e.g. electromagnetic radiation (including visible light, ultraviolet radiation, infrared radiation, gamma rays, X-rays, and radio waves). They consist of period oscillations in electrical and magnetic properties that grow, reach a peak, and diminish to zero in a periodic fashion.

Researchers believe that gravitational waves travel through space, although gravitational waves have never been directly detected. (See gravitational radiation.)

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Mon Sep 6 01:37:31 2010

How does a longitudinal wave differ from transverse and torsional waves?
Q. Also, since sound waves are the most common longitudinal waves, how can I know whether or not it IS a sound wave?
Asked by Ashley B - Tue Oct 23 21:30:45 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Hello Ashley - A longitudinal wave is like a compression wave that travels along a Slinky (or similar long, soft spring) when you hold it up by one end and then "bounce" that end down and up again along the axis of the Slinky. The compression wave will travel along the length of the Slinky, and bounce off any obstruction at the end. A transverse wave is probably best represented by the waves on the surface of the ocean, where the wave form is characterized by peaks and troughs that travel along the medium. Notice that a small object floating on the surface will move up and down as the wave passes, but movement in the direction of the wave propagation will be minimal. A vibrating guitar string is another example of a transverse wave,… [cont.]
Answered by Larry454 - Tue Oct 23 21:52:54 2007

what are the biggest kind of energy waves? How would a wave look like under a doppler effect?
Q. I want to know what the biggest kind of sound waves and light waves; i think for sound it is radio waves, but im not sure about light waves; also for the doppler effect how would a wave look like as it approached and left ypu? Example: a car's siren-how would the wavelengths look like as its resting normal posisition and as approached you and left you. Thank YOu for your help.
Asked by Runner - Tue Feb 12 07:37:49 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Actually, radio waves are electromagnetic waves, which is another way of saying light. (not visible light, obviously, it is way below the visible spectrum) They can be encoded with an audio signal and decoded by your radio at the other end. But yes, the do have the longest wavelength. Sound waves are the compression and rarifaction of air. The lower the pitch, the longer the wavelength. I suppose that only "subsonic" or sometimes "infrasound" describes waves below what we can hear. However, they can get way way below what we can hear. There is no limit, really, to how long a wavelength can get.
Answered by Joe Finkle - Tue Feb 12 08:32:27 2008

How are light waves and radio waves formed? What is the differance in the two?
Q. I've heard that they're the same thing? Why can we not see radio waves? Absence of photons? If that's correct, why are photons absent in radio waves? Or am I just totally gone beyond the possibility of safe return?
Asked by Scott - Fri Jun 26 21:41:11 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments

A. These are formed by an acceleration of electromagnetic charge. electrical fields create magnetic fields etc. so a self propagating wave is formed. Yes, they basically are the same thing. All electromagnetic waves are essentially the same except in frequency, and hence wavelength. The strength is based on frequency. You can't see radio waves, just as you cannot detect some very low pitched sounds, under 40Hz and high pitched over about 2000Hz. this will help you:
Answered by Snacktime - Fri Jun 26 21:56:25 2009

From Yahoo Answer Search: "waves"
Mon Aug 23 11:13:29 2010

Bank Holiday wave drama - The Sun
thesun.co.uk
Bank Holiday wave drama - The Sun
Tue, 31 Aug 2010 12:34:11 GMT+00:00
drama The Sun Riptides are caused when wind and waves push water towards the shore and create inward tidal pressure further along the coast.
Heat wave greets returning school children - CBC.ca
cbc.ca
Heat wave greets returning school children - CBC.ca
Tue, 31 Aug 2010 12:23:02 GMT+00:00
greets returning school children CBC.ca Heat waves are not exceptional in southern Quebec at this time of the year. After mid-August, three-day heat waves occur on average once every five years, ...
From Heat Waves to Hurricanes - MassLive.com
masslive.com
From Heat Waves to Hurricanes - MassLive.com
Sun, 29 Aug 2010 22:32:20 GMT+00:00
to Hurricanes MassLive.com Another great day out there, although it did get pretty hot today (into the 90's!). Expect this clear weather, and the heat, to continue for the beginning ...

From Google News Search: "waves"
Mon Sep 6 01:37:32 2010

CD Bob Philips Making Waves jpg
whatzup.com
CD Bob Philips Making Waves jpg
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[source page]

Making Waves Bob Phillips and Jim Steele by Jason Hoffman Making Waves A Demonstration of Kymotropic Inventions sat far too long in my stack of albums to review mostly because I didn t know how to tackle it It is startlingly original

waves jpg
i100.photobucket.com
waves jpg
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[source page]

Stormy Sea original by Getho Camp Fire original by Truebador Waves Waves Breaker Breaker 2 Swimmers

waves jpg
ndlive.com
waves jpg
399px x 600px | 17.20kB

[source page]

numbers of White Bass we are catching To think all summer I ve been driving by this shallow water back bay fishing as I head out to mid lake humps in 30 feet Wind is whipping up the waves so even dock fishing is a wet proposition We make the next move to Brendles lake store Coffee and cookies ya this is the life I ask for a fishing report from Harley owner manager

From Yahoo Image Search: "waves"
Mon Sep 6 01:37:32 2010

WuFu Glasses Use Ultrasonic Waves To Create Tactile Images For The ...
thedesignblog.org
WuFu Glasses Use Ultrasonic Waves To Create Tactile Images For The ...

Naresh

ue, 17 Aug 2010 10:42:28 GM

Drawing its name from the Chinese phrase five bats representing a symbol of luck and a long life, the visual aid carries the ultrasonic . waves. to sensors on opaque glasses and translates them, using two motors attached to the wrists of ...

From Google Blog Search: "waves"
Mon Sep 6 01:37:32 2010