Question detail

For Transverse and longitudinal waves, a student is working with a loudspeaker and microphone demonstration. Which option best uses compressions, rarefactions and detected vibrations to identify sound waves in air as examples of longitudinal waves.?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Waves in air, fluids and solids

Question

  1. A. sound waves: ray-box boundary observation in a loudspeaker and microphone demonstration
  2. B. sound waves: a generic statement that ignores compressions, rarefactions and detected vibrations
  3. C. sound waves: a boundary mistake that confuses sound versus ultrasound
  4. D. sound waves: a different Unit 4.6 idea from outside Transverse and longitudinal waves

Answer

The correct answer is sound waves: ray-box boundary observation in a loudspeaker and microphone demonstration.

Explanation

sound waves: ray-box boundary observation in a loudspeaker and microphone demonstration is correct because it uses the named evidence from a loudspeaker and microphone demonstration and stays anchored to Transverse and longitudinal waves. It avoids the common boundary error of sound versus ultrasound while keeping the learning objective visible.

Common mistake

Transverse and longitudinal waves common mistake 1

Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Identify sound waves in air as examples of longitudinal waves..

Answer by clearly explaining how to identify sound waves in air as examples of longitudinal waves..

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