Wave Characteristics
Light
Sound
EM Spectrum
Eyes and Ears
100

The highest point on a transverse wave.

Crest

100

A wave that can travel through a vacuum.

Electromagnetic Wave

100

Something that is travelled through.

Medium

100

A space with no matter in it.

Vacuum

100
The part of your eye that keeps out dust and other material.

Cornea

200

A disturbance that carries energy from one place to another without the transfer of mater.

Wave

200

Red, Green, and Blue

Primary Colors

200

A wave that moves in the same direction as the vibration that created it.

Longitudinal Wave

200

The type of EM waves that give people sunburn.

Ultraviolet Waves

200

The snail shaped part of your inner ear.

Cochlea

300

The distance between one point on a wave to the same point on the next wave.

Wavelength

300

Light bounces off a smooth surface and preserves an image.

Regular Reflection

300

The property of a sound wave that makes the sound louder when it gets higher.

Amplitude

300

The shortest an most dangerous Electromagnetic Waves.

Gamma Rays

300

The thin membrane in your ear that vibrates when it is hit by sound waves.

Eardrum

400

The formula for Hertz

Waves / Seconds

400

The bending of light when it changes mediums.

Refraction

400

The pitch of a sound goes up or down with its ...

Frequency

400

EM Waves with a wavelength between 400-700 nanometers.

Visible Light

400

The layer of cells in your eye that creates electricity when it is hit by light.

Retina

500

The property of a wave that increases as wavelength decreases.

Frequency (or Energy in the case of EM Waves)

500

Challenge: Explain why we see objects as different colors.

The object absorbs light from every wavelength of light except for the one that bounces back to our eyes. That wavelength is the color we see.

500

Challenge: Order the states of matter by how fast they carry sound waves.

Fastest to Slowest: Solids, Liquids, Gasses

500

Challenge: Name a use for every type of EM Wave

Radio Waves, Microwaves, Infrared Waves, Visible Light, Ultraviolet Waves, X Rays, Gamma Rays

500

The three smallest bones in the body.

Hammer, Anvil, and Stirrup