3. Transverse Waves.
Transverse waves are the kind of wave you usually think of when you
think of a wave. The motion of the material constituting the wave is up
and down so that as the wave moves forward the material moves
perpendicular (or
transverse) to the direction the wave moves. Examples
of transverse waves include waves on a string and
electromagnetic waves. Water waves can be approximately transverse in some cases.
The following simulation shows a graph of the motion of
one
location, the red circle, on a string which has a transverse wave on
it. The vertical location of points on the string (represented by the
circles) as a function of horizontal location along the x-axis and time is again described mathematically by

.
Notice that, while the wave moves forward along the string, the red
circle does not (in fact none of the circles move forward).
Note: Animations may take a few seconds to load.