Chapter 1: What Are Waves?

Before we can understand electromagnetic waves, we need to understand what a wave is in the first place. And the best way to start is with something you have probably already seen — a ripple on water.

1.1 The Ripple That Started It All

Imagine dropping a stone into a calm pond. What happens? Ripples spread outward in circles from the point where the stone hit the water. Those ripples are waves.

Here is the key idea that might surprise you: the water itself does not travel outward. If you placed a small leaf on the water, you would see it bob up and down as the wave passes — but the leaf stays roughly in the same place. The wave carries energy, not matter.

💡 Fun Fact: When you do a "wave" in a stadium, people stand up and sit down in sequence, but nobody actually moves from their seat. That is exactly how a physical wave works — energy moves, but the medium stays put!

1.2 The Anatomy of a Wave

Every wave has a few important features. Let us look at them:

📊 Diagram: A sine wave with labeled crest, trough, amplitude (A), and wavelength (λ).

Here are the key terms you need to know:

TermWhat It MeansEveryday Analogy
CrestThe highest point of the wavePeak of a hill on a roller coaster
TroughThe lowest point of the waveValley between two hills
AmplitudeHeight from rest to crestHow tall the roller coaster hill is
Wavelength (λ)Distance from one crest to the nextDistance between consecutive hills
Frequency (f)Crests passing a point per secondHow fast the hills come at you
Period (T)Time for one complete waveTime between two consecutive hills

1.3 The Wave Equation

There is a beautifully simple relationship between speed, frequency, and wavelength:

\[ v = f \times \lambda \]

Speed = Frequency × Wavelength

This equation tells us that if you know any two of these quantities, you can figure out the third. It works for all waves — water waves, sound waves, light waves, and everything in between.

🧠 Think About It: If you are at the beach and you count 5 waves arriving every 10 seconds, and each wave is 2 meters apart, what is the speed of the waves?

Answer: frequency = 0.5 Hz, so speed = 0.5 × 2 = 1 m/s

1.4 Two Flavors of Waves

Not all waves wiggle in the same direction. There are two main types:

Transverse waves vibrate perpendicular (at right angles) to the direction they travel. Think of shaking a rope up and down — the wave moves along the rope, but the rope moves up and down. Light and all electromagnetic waves are transverse.

Longitudinal waves vibrate parallel to their travel direction. Sound waves are like this — air molecules get pushed together (compression) and pulled apart (rarefaction) in the same direction the sound travels.

📊 Diagram: Transverse wave (rope shaken up and down) vs. longitudinal wave (Slinky pushed and pulled).

💡 Fun Fact: A Slinky can demonstrate both types! Push and pull it along its length for longitudinal waves, or shake it side to side for transverse waves.