Wave Energy Essays

  • Ocean Wave Energy as an Alternative

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    With the energy costs increasing and the available resources depleting many people are looking towards other renewable, easily derived energy resources. With this searching many people have looked toward ocean energy. Ocean energy is an ideal resource meeting the requirements people set when looking for new sources. Although the technology is still being developed and evolved, with the technology known ocean energy has already shown to be more prospective than other energy sources already in use

  • Music and the Brain

    2088 Words  | 5 Pages

    by the outer ear also serves in amplifying a higher range of frequencies corresponding to the top octave of the piano key board. The air pressure wave travels through the ear canal to ultimately reach and vibrate the timpanic membrane (i.e.-- the eardrum). At this particular juncture, the pressure wave energy of sound is translated into mechanical energy via the middle ear. Here, three small bones, the ossicles, vibrate in succession to produce a unique pattern of movements that embodies the frequencies

  • Salt Marshes

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    Oceanography                                        Salt Marshes Salt marshes are coastal wetlands rich in marine life, which are covered by water at least once per month. They are found in the intertidal zones along low-energy coastlines, forming along the margins of estuaries, where freshwater from the land mixes with seawater. These marshes can be found near the Great South Bay and the Long Island Sound. The entire south shore of Long Island is considered to be a salt marsh important to the

  • Sound Waves In Music

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    of mathematics.” As an avid musician, I chose to study the topic of how math applies to music, more specifically how sound waves are transmitted. My passion for music urged me to research the sounds that are made and how they are produced. Music is transmitted through sound waves, which are very similar to the sine waves studied in Trigonometry. The differences in the waves result in a different sounds that are transmitted. Vibrating objects travel through a medium (the material that the disturbance

  • Tidal and Wave Power

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tidal and Wave Power Tidal power operates by building a barrier across a river estuary. The tidal flow drives turbines to produce electricity. Europe's only tidal power station is at Rance in Northern France. Some sites in the U.K could be developed to provide tidal power but the drawback is that these schemes affect the habitat of wildlife such as birds and fish because they alter the tidal currents. Also, barrage will only provide power for about 10 hours per day. Power for the other

  • The Importance Of Electromagnetic Waves

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    INTRODUCTION Electromagnetic waves propagate in waves with several measurable characters, namely: wavelength, amplitude and speed frequency. The amplitude is the wave height, whereas the wavelength is the distance between the two peaks. The frequency is the sum waves passing through a single point in a single unit of time. The frequency depends on the speed of wave propagation. hence, the speed of the electromagnetic energy is constant. Electromagnetic energy has a very important role in everyday

  • AM vs FM Radio

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    broadcasted with both microwaves and longer radio waves. These are transmitted in two ways: amplitude modulation (AM) and frequency modulation (FM). Amplitude radio is created by combining a sound wave from a microphone, tape, record, or CD with a "carrier" radio wave. This results in a wave that transmits voice or programming as its amplitude (intensity) increases and decreases. Frequency modulation conveys information, voice, and music on a radio wave is to slightly change, or modulate, the frequency

  • Factors Influencing Coastal Processes

    923 Words  | 2 Pages

    Factors Influencing Coastal Processes In this essay I aim to describe and explain factors affecting coastal processes. I will focus and explore how waves, tides, winds and mass movement processes can change the form of the coasts within our lifetime. The three key questions I will focus on are: * What are the energy and sediment inputs into the coastal system? * What are the processes that erode coasts? * How is sediment transported and deposited? I will conclude by describing and

  • Frequency, Resonance and Radio Waves

    1180 Words  | 3 Pages

    Although most people do not know what it takes to keep radios working. In a radio there are many elements needed to keep a radio working frequency, resonance and radio waves are all elements needed to power a radio. Frequency means the number of incidence of a repeating event per unit of time. Frequency sends sound signals on a radio wave. FM also stands for frequency modulation. FM and AM are the main chiefs of sending music and words. Frequency receives the name temporal frequency. FM is better than

  • Flute Acoustics

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sound requires an oscillating motion or air flow. In the flute, the air jet, and the resonance in the air in instrument produces an oscillating component of the flow. As the air starts to vibrate some of the energy (sound ) is radiated out the ends and through any open holes. Most of the energy is lost as a sort of friction (viscous loss) with the walls. The pitch or note can be altered very slightly by breath and lip adjustment, but if changed completely the length of the air must change. This

  • EarthQuakes

    2701 Words  | 6 Pages

    earthquakes. The energy released then travels along fault lines in seismic waves (World Book Encyclopedia). Seismic waves are either P-waves (primary), or S-waves (secondary). P-waves create a relatively low wave train and arrive at the surface first. On the surface they create a push-pull effect, thus moving the surface up and down. Their low amplitude and vertical movement create an effect much like a dangling slinky. S-waves arrive second and are much more damaging. The high amplitude of S-waves, combined

  • Acoustic Levitation Essay

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    air. In space, it can hold objects steady so they don't ... ... middle of paper ... ...nstead of the common crystalline state, something that is extremely hard (gizmodo.com). That’s where the liquid levitation comes in, a machine that uses sound waves to make liquid solutions float. This way the liquid solutions don't touch any solid materials as the water evaporates, solidifying in the much desired amorphous drug, so it can be more efficient in helping. We can draw to a close that the effect of

  • Light Scattering Essay

    740 Words  | 2 Pages

    propagating energy which is scattered. Light scattering is deflection of a ray from a straight path i.e. Irregularities in the propagation medium, particles, or in the interface between two media. Deviations from the law of reflection due to irregularities on a surface are also usually considered to be a form of scattering. Scattering is defined as the dispersal of a beam of radiation into a range of directions as a result of physical interactions. When a particle intercepts an electromagnetic wave, part

  • Thomas Young

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    double-slit experiment established that light was a wave motion, making his famous. Over the years, he gained new interests. He started studying Egyptology, and while he was one Napoleon’s expeditions he started studying the texts of Rosetta Stone. This in time helped to decipher the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic writing. Some other interests that Young acquired over the years, leading him to more discoveries are surface tension, elasticity and energy. He even worked as a professor at schools, including

  • AP Human Geography: Morston Marshes

    1162 Words  | 3 Pages

    the largest waves is wind B because it has the largest amount of time and it is a strong wind and has the most distance to travel. 2b.The smallest waves will be created by a, and c because they are both light winds and they have the shortest distance to travel. 3a.Prevailing wind – the wind that blows most often; in the UK it is a south west wind (it blows from the south west.) 3b.The waves are very high because they have nothing close to them to make the waves slow down.

  • HAARP Radio Wave Generator

    1308 Words  | 3 Pages

    HAARP HAARP is an extremely low frequency radio wave generator. It stands for High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program. It is a massive antennae array up in Alaska on the Copper River Basin. It’s altitude fluctuates between 1000 and 3000 feet above sea level. It is operated by the US military, more specifically the Navy and Air Force. It operates between 2.8 and 10 MHz. It was also voted one of the 10 most under reported news stories of the year by journalists. Scientific Perspectives-

  • Sound Waves

    1623 Words  | 4 Pages

    a sound wave? A sound wave is produced by a mechanical vibration, such as a tuning fork. The vibrating object causes the surrounding medium, such as air, to vibrate as well.The wave travels through the medium to a detector, like your ear, and it is heard.As with any type of wave, a sound wave is also described by it's wavelength, amplitude, period, and frequency. WAVELENGTH is the distance from one point on the wave, to the next identical point, or the length of one part of the wave. AMPLITUDE

  • Earthquakes

    2186 Words  | 5 Pages

    of nature. Six kinds of shock waves are generated in the process. Two are classified as body waves, that is, they travel through the inside of the earth and the other four are surface waves. The waves are further classified by the kinds of motions they incur to rock particles. Primary or compressional waves, known as P waves, send particles moving back and forth in the same direction as the waves are traveling, as secondary or transverse shear waves, known as S waves, create vibrations perpendicular

  • Exploring Sound Amplitude in Varying PVC Pipe Lengths

    1036 Words  | 3 Pages

    produced will have a lower amplitude each time because the sound will lose energy as it continues in the pipe for a certain amount of time. However, the data actually showed that with every increase in pipe length, the amplitude got louder as well, thus refuting the hypothesis. These results made sense because what was created inside the PVC pipes was a standing still sound wave, or a resonance wave. These kinds of waves have certain locations on its wavelength in order for the change in sound to

  • Interpreting Emotions in 'The Raft of the Medusa'

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    Theodore Géricault does this through his uses of dark and bright colors that contributes to the feelings of mournfulness and hope. While the stormy waves add to the hectic and desperate feel of the piece and captures the brutality of nature. What stands out in Raft of the Medusa is the man at the end of raft. He is using garments of clothing to wave down the boat in the distance. While he is not the tallest figure in the piece, he is standing in front of the horizon, the brightest part, making