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Wave motion
is manifested in the propagation of disturbance in a physical system.
The system may be liquid, such as water or a rope. For examples,
the particles of water in the water waves are set up when a stone
is dropped into a quiet pool. The waves propagated on the surface
do not move in the direction of the waves but simply vibrate up
and down, i.e. at right angles to the path the wave is following.
Water waves are thus transverse waves.
In the laboratory,
the experiments can be illustrated if you fix one end of a long
thin rope above the ground. Let the rope hang a little loose and
the give it a series of regular flips up and down or swing a slinky
spring to and fro on the top of the table, exactly the same as the
diagrams shown in textbooks or workbooks.
These demonstrations
would produce an illustration typical of the way in which a wave
motion is represented graphically. This represents what is called
a Sine Wave and is a rather inadequate representation of the dynamic
process that is actually in progress because the students are unable
to visualize or imagine the actual vibrations. Thus, I have come
out with an apparatus called 'Transwave' to give a better illustration
of the dynamic process of the actual wave in progress.
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