transverse
(adjective)
Not tangent, so that a nondegenerate angle is formed between the two things intersecting.
Examples of transverse in the following topics:
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Transverse Waves
- A string which is fixed at one end and moved up and down at the other creates a transverse wave.
- Light is an example of a transverse wave.
- A ripple on a pond and a wave on a string are easily visualized transverse waves.
- Transverse waves are waves that are oscillating perpendicularly to the direction of propagation.
- Transverse waves have their applications in many areas of physics.
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Reflections
- The wave that occurs due to this motion is called a transverse wave.
- Transverse waves have what are called peaks and troughs.
- Diagram of a transverse wave.
- A transverse wave that is fixed at the end point.
- When a transverse wave meets a free end, it is reflected.
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Standing Waves on a String
- A transverse wave will move along the string until it reaches the other end.
- When a transverse wave meets a fixed end, the wave is reflected, but inverted.
- The wave is reflected, but unlike a transverse wave with a fixed end, it is not inverted.
- When a transverse wave meets a fixed end, the wave is reflected, but inverted.
- The wave is reflected, but unlike a transverse wave with a fixed end, it is not inverted.
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Waves
- A wave can be transverse or longitudinal depending on the direction of its oscillation.
- Transverse waves occur when a disturbance causes oscillations perpendicular (at right angles) to the propagation (the direction of energy transfer).
- While mechanical waves can be both transverse and longitudinal, all electromagnetic waves are transverse.
- In this chapter we will closely examine the difference between longitudinal and transverse waves along with some of the properties they possess.
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Water Waves
- Water waves can be commonly observed in daily life, and comprise both transverse and longitudinal wave motion.
- The uniqueness of water waves is found in the observation that they comprise both transverse and longitudinal wave motion.
- In the case of monochromatic linear plane waves in deep water, particles near the surface move in circular paths, creating a combination of longitudinal (back and forth) and transverse (up and down) wave motions.
- This is a result of the wave having both transverse and longitudinal properties.
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The Hall Effect
- When current runs through a wire exposed to a magnetic field a potential is produced across the conductor that is transverse to the current.
- The Hall effect is the phenomenon in which a voltage difference (called the Hall voltage) is produced across an electrical conductor, transverse to the conductor's electric current when a magnetic field perpendicular to the conductor's current is applied.
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Longitudinal Waves
- Like transverse waves, longitudinal waves do not displace mass.
- By doing so, they create transverse waves.
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The Speed of a Wave on a String
- The wave that occurs due to this motion is called a transverse wave.
- A transverse wave is defined as a wave where the movement of the particles of the medium is perpendicular to the direction of the propagation of the wave.
- Transverse waves have what are called peaks and troughs.
- In transverse waves, the media the wave is traveling in moves perpendicular to the direction of the wave.
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Harmonic Wave Functions
- In this Atom we shall consider wave motion resulting from harmonic vibrations and discuss harmonic transverse wave in the context of a string.
- The important point here is to realize that oscillatory attributes (like time period, angular and linear frequency) of wave motion is same as that of vibration of a particle in transverse direction.
- The wavelength is equal to linear distance between repetitions of transverse disturbance or phase.
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Polarization By Passing Light Through Polarizers
- These electromagnetic (EM) waves are transverse waves.
- Figure 1 demonstrates that a transverse wave is one oscillates perpendicular to the direction of the energy transfer.
- An EM wave, such as light, is a transverse wave.