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4 answers

Ah, nice question. Think of it this way - Remember the balls on a string that you can play with? You take the one ball on the end, and pull it up to a 45 degree angle. When you let it go, it hits the next ball, which trasfers the energy through 4-5 other balls that remain still, and finally reaches it's energy output point - the last ball. At which point, that ball "magically" bounces away from the stationary ball. Then, the cycle repeats......

Now, picture a wave. The tsunami wave that hit the shores of all of those countries was NOT made up of the same molocules of water at "Ground Zero". They are the molocules that have been there for days, months, or maybe years.

The energy from the earthquake moved the water - on a molecular level - at "Ground Zero". In turn, those molocules moved the nearby molocules of water......and so on and so on. This happens at an AMAZING speed, milliseconds.......That's how it works....

2006-12-12 05:32:39 · answer #1 · answered by Rod Farva 2 · 0 0

I basically understand of two, doing artwork and heat pass oftentimes, the considered skill refers to "the flair for inflicting differences". The be conscious is utilized in numerous distinctive contexts. The scientific use has an exact, properly-defined meaning, on the same time as the numerous non-scientific makes use of oftentimes do not. (see right here.) In physics, skill is the ability to do artwork and has many distinctive varieties (skill, kinetic, electromagnetic, and so on.) no rely what its variety, actual skill has the same instruments as artwork; a rigidity utilized by using a distance. The SI unit of skill, the joule, equals one newton utilized by using one meter, as an occasion.

2016-10-18 03:33:33 · answer #2 · answered by felio 4 · 0 0

They transfer a whole whack-load of energy from their source (say, an underwater earthquake) to their destination (say, the hapless people on the shore).

2006-12-11 12:32:39 · answer #3 · answered by poorcocoboiboi 6 · 0 0

it proves that for every action there is a equal or greater reaction

2006-12-11 12:39:25 · answer #4 · answered by mark_grvr 3 · 0 0

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