Geolay
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Which is the most important nature of wave? period? energy? or other?
thanks
thanks
Academic said:Ive think of a wave a that which satisfies the wave equation.
Geolay said:So what is the crucial point of a wave equation? I think your answer follows no logic.
HallsofIvy said:The crucial point, in my opinion, is that a wave transports energy from place to place without transporting matter (or whatever it is that the wave is "waving" in).
sophiecentaur said:A fairly catch=all description of a wave could be a disturbance that travels through space. (That allows for the need for some waves to have a medium to travel through)
Geolay said:So what is the crucial point of a wave equation? I think your answer follows no logic.
stevenb said:A boulder rolling down a hill is a disturbance that travels through space, but it is not a wave, or is not usually thought to be so. (no comments about DeBroglie wavelength please)
It is striking that the concept of waves is
so hard to define, and that the distinction
between wave-like and non-wave-like behaviour
can be so fuzzy. Taking all these examples
into account, we stick with our definition of a
wave as an organized propagating imbalance;
just don’t ask us to define ‘organized’.
billiards said:I strongly recommend giving this Nature article a read:
"What is a wave?"
http://inside.mines.edu/~rsnieder/nature_wave.pdf (pdf file -- 66 KB)
billiards said:I strongly recommend giving this Nature article a read:
"What is a wave?"
http://inside.mines.edu/~rsnieder/nature_wave.pdf (pdf file -- 66 KB)
The author's conclude:
dulrich said:That's a great article. Thanks.
Geolay said:Thank u for this article!
sophiecentaur said:"an organised propagating imbalance" sounds as good as anything I've read. (Last line of that article).