Light Waves
Sound Waves
Parts of the Eye
Parts of the Ear
Waves
100

What property of light makes objects appear different colors?

The wavelength of light reflected into the eye.

100

What property of a sound wave determines pitch?

Frequency

100

Which part of the eye controls the amount of light entering?

The iris

100

What part of the ear vibrates first when sound enters?

The eardrum.

100

What type of wave is light?

Transverse

200

Why does a red object look red under red light?

It reflects red light and absorbs other wavelengths.

200

In which medium can sound NOT travel?

Outer Space (Vacuum)


200

What is the function of the retina?

The retina converts light into neural signals.

200

Name the coiled, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear that helps us hear.

Cochlea

200

What type of wave is sound?

Longitudinal

300

Which part of the electromagnetic spectrum causes sunburn?

Ultraviolet (UV) light.

300

How are amplitude and loudness related?

Greater amplitude = louder sound.

300

What does the optic nerve do?

It carries signals from the retina to the brain.

300

Which three small bones in the middle ear amplify sound vibrations?

The Ossicles - The hammer (malleus), anvil (incus), and stirrup (stapes). 

300

Compare particle motion in longitudinal vs. transverse waves.

Longitudinal = parallel to wave direction.
Transverse = perpendicular to wave direction.

400

Why is red at the top of a rainbow and violet at the bottom?

Because red light is refracted less than violet, which bends more.

400

What happens to a sound wave’s energy when its amplitude increases?

The Intensity increases

400

How do rods and cones differ in detecting light?

Rods detect dim light/black and white. Cones detect color and bright light.

400

Describe how sound travels from the eardrum to the cochlea.

Eardrum vibrates → middle ear bones vibrate → fluid in cochlea moves → nerve impulses sent.

400

In a longitudinal wave, what are compressions and rarefactions?

Compressions = particles pushed together, rarefactions = particles spread apart.

500

Explain why visible light is only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Visible light is the only range our eyes can detect, but EM waves include many others (radio, UV, X-ray, etc.).

500

Compare how frequency affects pitch and amplitude affects volume.

Frequency → pitch (high/low sound). Amplitude → volume (loud/soft).

500

How do corrective lenses help with nearsightedness and farsightedness?

They bend light so it focuses correctly on the retina (concave lens for nearsighted, convex for farsighted).

500

How does the cochlea turn vibrations into nerve impulses?

Hair cells in the cochlea detect fluid vibrations and convert them into electrical signals sent through the auditory nerve.

500

Why can light travel through space but sound cannot?

Light is an electromagnetic wave (no medium needed), sound is a mechanical wave (needs a medium).

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