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Science

Waves and Their Properties

Overview

Students model waves using rope, discovering the key properties that describe any wave and distinguishing between the two types.

Learning Objective
Students understand the properties of waves — amplitude, wavelength, and frequency — and can distinguish between transverse and longitudinal waves.

Resources needed

  • A rope or piece of cloth at least 3 metres long
  • OR a slinky spring

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 One student holds one end of a rope, another holds the other end.
  2. 2 Wave the rope up and down — observe the wave moving along it.
  3. 3 Introduce: this is a transverse wave — the rope moves perpendicular to the direction the wave travels.
  4. 4 Identify amplitude (height of the wave from centre), wavelength (distance between two crests), frequency (waves per second).
  5. 5 Now push the rope forward and pull it back — create a longitudinal compression wave.
  6. 6 Introduce: sound is a longitudinal wave — air molecules push and pull along the direction the sound travels.
  7. 7 Ask: what type of wave is light? (Transverse — but it does not need a medium to travel through).

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Measure wavelength and frequency of the rope wave — calculate wave speed: speed = frequency x wavelength.
  • Demonstrate wave reflection: send a wave along a rope tied to a wall and observe it reflect.
  • Discuss how earthquakes produce both transverse and longitudinal waves.
More information

Teach: wave, transverse, longitudinal, amplitude, wavelength, frequency, crest, trough. The rope demonstration is essential — wave properties are very difficult to understand without physical modelling.

Focus on transverse waves and the three properties before introducing longitudinal waves.

Can students draw and label a transverse wave with amplitude and wavelength correctly identified? Can they explain the difference between transverse and longitudinal waves?

Any rope, cord, or long piece of cloth demonstrates transverse waves.

Students often think the rope moves in the direction the wave travels. The medium oscillates perpendicular to wave direction — the wave carries energy, not matter.

Wave physics underlies acoustics, optics, telecommunications, and seismology.