Waves

A wave is a disturbance in land, water, air or space that moves energy from one location to another. Waves cannot always be seen with the bare eye. Despite some waves being invisible, engineers still study waves of all types and sizes – from earthquakes to radio waves – to make our world a safer and better place.

Engineers must understand the properties of waves—such as wavelength, frequency, amplitude and speed —and how waves can differ from one another in order to design safe and effective products. Two main categories of waves interest engineers and scientists:

  • mechanical wave is an oscillation of matter that transfers energy through the matter. There are three types of mechanical waves:
    • Transverse waves wherein the particles oscillate perpendicular to the direction that the wave travels.
    • Longitudinal waves wherein the particles oscillate parallel to the direction that the wave travels.
    • Surface waves wherein the particles oscillate both perpendicular and parallel, so they end up moving in a circle.
  • Electromechanical waves are created as a result of vibrations between an electric field and a magnetic field. These waves have different frequencies and wavelengths and include radio waves, microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays and gamma rays.

To predict how tsunamis will travel after an earthquake takes place under the ocean in order to issue warnings that protect public health, civil engineers must understand wave properties and how they travel.

Electrical engineers also use their understanding of wave properties when designing electronic products that we use every day so that radios tune in to the right stations, or your cell phone only picks up the calls meant for you.

Sound and acoustic engineers know that the shape of a room and its materials greatly impact how sound waves travel. Recording studios are designed in soundproof booths so that the recorded music does not contain unwanted external noise, while libraries and schools are designed to reduce a myriad of introduced noises to assure a quiet, non-distracting learning environment.

Waves Curricula

Make waves in your classroom with the resources featured here, by grade band, to inspire your K-12 students make sense of the phenomena of waves!


Grades K-2

  • Coming Soon!

Grades 3-5

  • Make Some Waves
    Make Some Waves

    preview of 'Make Some Waves' Activity

    In this activity, students use their own creativity (and their bodies) to make longitudinal and transverse waves. Through the use of common items, they will investigate the difference between longitudinal and transverse waves.

  • Surf's Up!
    Surf's Up!

    preview of 'Surf's Up!' Lesson

    This lesson introduces the concepts of longitudinal and transverse waves. Students see several demonstrations of waves and characterize them by transverse and longitudinal behavior.

  • Plumbing the Deep - Using Sound Waves to See
    Plumbing the Deep - Using Sound Waves to See

    preview of 'Plumbing the Deep - Using Sound Waves to See' Lesson

    Students learn about echolocation: what it is and how engineers use it to "see" things in the dark, or deep underwater. They also learn how animals use echolocation to catch their meals and travel the ocean waters and skies without running into things.

  • Seeing and Feeling Sound Vibrations
    Seeing and Feeling Sound Vibrations

    preview of 'Seeing and Feeling Sound Vibrations' Activity

    Students examine the existence of sound by listening to and seeing sound waves while conducting a set of simple activities as a class or in pairs at stations. Students describe sound in terms of its pitch, volume and frequency. They use this knowledge to discuss how engineers study sound waves to he...

  • Visible Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum
    Visible Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

    preview of 'Visible Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum' Lesson

    During this lesson, the electromagnetic spectrum is explained and students learn that visible light makes up only a portion of this wide spectrum. Students also learn that engineers use electromagnetic waves for many different applications.

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Grades 6-8

  • Ultrasound Imaging
    Ultrasound Imaging

    preview of 'Ultrasound Imaging' Activity

    Students learn about ultrasound and how it can be used to determine the shapes and contours of unseen objects. Using a one-dimensional ultrasound imaging device (either prepared by the teacher or put together by the students) that incorporates a LEGO® MINDSTORMS® EV3 intelligent brick and ultrasonic...

  • The Amazing Aerogel
    The Amazing Aerogel

    preview of 'The Amazing Aerogel' Lesson

    In this lesson and its associated activity, students learn about aerogel, the silicon-based solid with a sponge-like structure. Students also learn about density and how aerogel is 99.8% air by volume, making it the lightest solid known to humans!

  • Radar: Using Sound for Sight
    Radar: Using Sound for Sight

    preview of 'Radar: Using Sound for Sight' Lesson

    Students use these concepts to understand how dolphins use echolocation to locate prey, escape predators, navigate their environment, such as avoiding gillnets set by commercial fishing vessels. Students also learn that dolphin sounds are vibrations created by vocal organs, and that sound is a type ...

  • Waves and Wave Properties
    Waves and Wave Properties

    preview of 'Waves and Wave Properties' Lesson

    Students learn about the types of waves and how they change direction, as well as basic wave properties such as wavelength, frequency, amplitude and speed. During the presentation of lecture information on wave characteristics and properties, students take notes using a handout.

  • Riding the Radio Waves
    Riding the Radio Waves

    preview of 'Riding the Radio Waves' Lesson

    Students learn how AM radios work through basic concepts about waves and magnetic fields. Then students learn general concepts about magnetic fields, leading into how radio waves are created and transmitted.

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Grades 9-12

  • Exploring the Electromagnetic Spectrum
    Exploring the Electromagnetic Spectrum

    preview of 'Exploring the Electromagnetic Spectrum' Lesson

    Students learn the basics of the electromagnetic spectrum and how various types of electromagnetic waves are related in terms of wavelength and energy. In addition, they are introduced to the various types of waves that make up the electromagnetic spectrum including, radio waves, ultraviolet waves, ...

  • Earthquakes Living Lab: Finding Epicenters & Measuring Magnitudes
    Earthquakes Living Lab: Finding Epicenters & Measuring Magnitudes

    preview of 'Earthquakes Living Lab: Finding Epicenters & Measuring Magnitudes' Activity

    Students learn how engineers characterize earthquakes through seismic data. Then, acting as engineers, they use real-world seismograph data and a tutorial/simulation accessed through the Earthquakes Living Lab to locate earthquake epicenters via triangulation and determine earthquake magnitudes.

  • Monitoring Noise Levels with a Smart Device
    Monitoring Noise Levels with a Smart Device

    preview of 'Monitoring Noise Levels with a Smart Device ' Activity

    Students learn the physics of sound and how it travels, as well as how noise impacts human health. Then they devise an experimental procedure and teams collect data in their classroom, school and near a loud noise source (such as a busy road or construction site) using smart phones/tablets, micropho...

  • Lab Research to Engineer a Phosphorescent Bioplastic
    Lab Research to Engineer a Phosphorescent Bioplastic

    preview of 'Lab Research to Engineer a Phosphorescent Bioplastic' Activity

    Students conduct lab research using the steps of the scientific method to design a biosolid that best meets specified objectives (criteria, constraints). They learn about the light mechanism that changes ultraviolet bead color and see how three different light wavelengths (UV/black light, visible/LE...


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