This is needed if you want to prove something to be true.
What is evidence?
Both of these types of waves carry energy and can be reflected, refracted and difracted.
What are sound and light waves?
Moon gazing is interacting with waves in this way.
What is reflection?
This is an opinion about a topic that is supported with evidence and reasoning.
What is an argument?
This is the number of waves that pass a point in a specific amount of time.
What is frequency?
What is a compression?
This argues, convinces, or suggests something.
What is a claim?
Light waves are known as this type of wave.
What is electromagnetic?
Sound waves need this to pass vibrations through.
What is a medium?
This is an explanation of why a reader should consider the evidence and accept the claim.
What is reasoning?
This is the measure of how fast a wave is moving through a medium.
What is wave speed?
"What do you think would have happened if Johnson did not sign the civil rights laws into action" is an example of this type of question.
What is a compelling question?
This is how far a wave rises or dips down from it's resting position.
What is amplitude?
This type of wave interaction causes a pencil in water to appear bent.
What is refraction?
This is refers to how far a wave rises higher or dips down from its resting position.
What is amplitude?
Waves with this wavelength carry more energy than waves with longer wavelengths.
What is shorter?
This is the process of asking questions, finding sources, reading, writing, and answering questions past using evidence.
What is historical thinking?
These types of waves can travel through outer space.
What are light waves?
In this type of wave, particles move perpendicularly to the direction of the wave.
What is a transverse wave?
This is an area where particles are more spread apart in a wave.
What is rarefaction?
This is an opposing claim.
What is a counterclaim?
These type of waves have crests and troughs.
What are transverse waves?
In this type of wave, particles vibrate parallel to the direction of the motion of the wave.
What is a longitudinal wave?
What is defraction?