Parts of a wave
Electromagnetic waves
Transparent, Translucent, Opaque
Parts of the ear
Properties of sound waves
100

What is the name of the distance between two crests or troughs?

What is wavelength?

100

What does a mechanical wave need to transmit energy that an electromagnetic wave does not need?

What is a medium?

100

An object is this when light is not able to pass through it.

What is opaque?

100
The three bones within the ear that help us perceive sound.

What are the malleus, incus, and stapes?

100

The equation used to find the frequency of a wave.

What is velocity divided by wavelength?

200

The name of the height of the crest or trough from the middle of the wave.

What is Amplitude?

200
The vacuum that electromagnetic waves can travel that mechanical waves cannot.

What is the vacuum of space?

200

An abject is this when light can travel through it completely.

What is transparent?

200

This is the part of the ear that vibrates to send a signal to the middle ear.

What is the eardrum?

200

The unit used to define frequency.

What is Hertz?

300

The top of a transverse wave.

What is the crest?

300
What type of wave is an electromagnetic wave?

 What is transverse?

300

An object is this when light passes through it but not all the way, leaving objects behind it to be blurry.

What is translucent?

300

The part of the ear which sound travels through first.

What is the ear canal?

300

SI unit used to measure velocity.

What is m/s?

400

The bottom of a transverse wave.

What is the trough?

400

Electromagnetic waves consist of these 3 visible components.

What are crest, trough, amplitude, and wavelength?

400

Building structures are most commonly used by using what kind of objects?

What are opaque objects?

400

The three main parts of the ear.

What are the outer ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear?

400

The higher the frequency the higher the...

What is pitch?

500

The part of a longitudinal wave that is spread out.

What is a rarefaction?

500

Both mechanical and electromagnetic waves don't transmit this.

What is matter?

500

Stained glass is an example of this.

What is translucent?

500

The bone surrounding the ear.

What is the temporal bone?

500

The amplitude of a wave effects the what?

What is the wavelength?