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30 April, 07:31

What do you observe happens when a p wave travels from a solid to a liquid?

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  1. 30 April, 10:26
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    1 - It depends on the incident angle at which the P-wave hits the liquid. Using snells law, a portion of the energy is converted to an S-Wave, a portion of it ir reflected, but the majority of the energy just disappears (it is absorbed into the liquid) since P-waves do not travel through liquids. 2 - it spreads out making the sound travel faster than it does in air 3 - P-waves move up and down 4 - S-waves move side to side 5 - P-waves are pressure waves, or longitudinal waves. The motion is in the direction of the wave. These waves travel through solids and liquids. S-waves are shear waves, or shaking waves. The motion is perpendicular to the wave direction. These waves cannot travel through liquids. An earthquake produces both P and S waves and by monitoring the arrival (or non-arrival) of P and/or S waves around the Earth we can infer a liquid component to the core.
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