Science, asked by harshalgudade32, 2 days ago

what is the difference between sound waves and waves rising in water​

Answers

Answered by ankitpatle0
17

Water waves are a hybrid of the two kinds.... The key distinction is frequency; sound waves are measured in kilohertz, whereas water waves are measured in seconds. Water waves are caused by a disturbance in the water's surface, such as a pebble thrown into a pond or a swimmer slapping the surface repeatedly. The disturbance for sound waves is a change in air pressure, which might be caused by the vibrating cone within a speaker.

Waves can be longitudinal, transverse, or a mix of the two. (Water waves are a mix of transverse and longitudinal waves.) … In both air and water, sound waves travel in a straight line. Their disturbances are periodic pressure changes that are conveyed via fluids.

Answered by megha8080m
18

Answer:

sound waves:

1.  For sound waves, the disturbance is a change in air pressure, perhaps created by the oscillating cone inside a speaker.

2. sound waves are in kilohertz.

3. Sound waves are a type of energy that's released when an object vibrates

Waves rising in water:

1. Water waves, the disturbance is in the surface of the water, perhaps created by a rock thrown into a pond or by a swimmer splashing the surface repeatedly.

2. Water waves are actually a combination of both the types

3. The main difference is frequency water waves are of course much slower.

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