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GCSE/Combined Science/WJEC

P6.1Wave properties: transverse vs longitudinal; v = fλ; reflection and refraction

Notes

Waves

What is a Wave?

A wave transfers energy from one place to another without transferring matter. The particles (or fields) vibrate as the wave passes, but return to their original positions.

Types of Wave

Transverse Waves

  • Vibration (oscillation) is perpendicular (at right angles) to the direction of wave travel
  • Examples: all electromagnetic waves (light, radio, X-rays), water surface waves, S-waves (seismic)
  • Can travel through a vacuum (EM waves)
  • Can be shown on a rope or slinky shaken sideways

Longitudinal Waves

  • Vibration is parallel (in the same direction) to the direction of wave travel
  • Examples: sound waves, ultrasound, P-waves (seismic)
  • Travel as a series of compressions (regions of high pressure) and rarefactions (regions of low pressure)
  • Cannot travel through a vacuum (require a medium)

Key Wave Properties

Amplitude A: Maximum displacement from the rest position. Measured in metres (m). Greater amplitude = more energy carried.

Wavelength (λ): Distance between two adjacent points in phase (e.g., crest to crest, or compression to compression). Measured in metres (m).

Frequency (f): Number of complete waves (oscillations) passing a point per second. Measured in hertz (Hz).

Time period (T): Time for one complete wave to pass a point. $$T = rac{1}{f}$$

Wave speed (v): How fast the wave travels through the medium. $$v = flambda$$

Where:

  • v = wave speed (m/s)
  • f = frequency (Hz)
  • λ = wavelength (m)

Worked example: A sound wave has a frequency of 340 Hz and a wavelength of 1 m. Speed = 340 × 1 = 340 m/s (speed of sound in air at room temperature — a useful fact to remember)

Reflection

Reflection occurs when a wave hits a surface and bounces back.

Law of reflection: Angle of incidence = Angle of reflection (both measured from the normal — a line perpendicular to the surface at the point of incidence).

Applications: Mirrors, echo (sound), radar, sonar (ultrasound for depth measurement in the sea).

Echo calculation: $$ ext{distance} = rac{v imes t}{2}$$ (Divide by 2 because the wave travels to the object AND back)

Example: An ultrasound pulse takes 0.4 s to return from the seabed. Speed of sound in water = 1500 m/s. Distance = (1500 × 0.4)/2 = 300 m.

Refraction

Refraction is the change in direction (bending) of a wave when it passes from one medium to another — caused by a change in wave speed.

  • Wave travelling into a denser medium (e.g., air → glass): slows down → bends toward the normal
  • Wave travelling into a less dense medium (e.g., glass → air): speeds up → bends away from the normal

Key point: Frequency does NOT change during refraction. Speed and wavelength both change.

Snell's Law (Higher Tier): n = sin i / sin r (ratio of sines of incident and refracted angles)

Applications: Lenses (spectacles, cameras), prisms (splitting white light into spectrum), optical fibres (total internal reflection — basis of broadband internet).

WJEC Practical Note

WJEC required practical: investigating reflection and refraction using ray boxes, mirrors and glass blocks. Draw incident ray, reflected/refracted ray, normal; measure angles accurately with a protractor.

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Wave speed calculation

    Question 1 (4 marks)

    A water wave has a frequency of 2.5 Hz and a wavelength of 0.8 m.

    (a) Calculate the wave speed. (2 marks)
    (b) The wave enters a shallower region and slows to 1.6 m/s. If the frequency remains the same, calculate the new wavelength. (2 marks)

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-combined-science

  2. Question 24 marks

    Transverse vs longitudinal waves

    Question 2 (4 marks)

    Compare transverse and longitudinal waves. Give one example of each.

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  3. Question 34 marks

    Echo — distance calculation

    Question 3 (4 marks)

    A ship uses sonar to measure the depth of the sea. An ultrasound pulse is sent to the seabed and returns 0.6 seconds later. The speed of sound in seawater is 1500 m/s.

    (a) Calculate the distance travelled by the ultrasound pulse. (2 marks)
    (b) Calculate the depth of the sea at this point. (1 mark)
    (c) Explain why your answer to (a) is divided by 2. (1 mark)

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  4. Question 43 marks

    Refraction — direction of bending

    Question 4 (3 marks)

    A ray of light passes from air into a glass block.

    (a) What happens to the speed of light as it enters the glass? (1 mark)
    (b) In which direction does the ray bend — toward or away from the normal? (1 mark)
    (c) What happens to the frequency of the light as it refracts? (1 mark)

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  5. Question 56 marks

    Waves — properties and applications extended response

    Question 5 (6 marks)

    Describe the properties of waves and explain how reflection and refraction are used in two different technological applications. (WJEC 6-mark extended response)

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Flashcards

P6.1 — Wave properties: transverse vs longitudinal waves; v = fλ; reflection and refraction

10-card SR deck for WJEC Eduqas GCSE Combined Science topic P6.1

10 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)