What Is a Transverse Wave?
A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy through a medium (or through empty space) without transferring matter. The medium itself doesn't travel — it oscillates locally while the wave pattern moves forward. Drop a stone into a pond and watch: the water doesn't rush outward, but the ripple pattern does. The energy travels; the water stays.
In a transverse wave, the oscillation of the medium is perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. Picture a rope stretched horizontally and shaken up and down at one end: the rope moves vertically (up-down), but the wave travels horizontally along its length. The displacement and the travel direction are at right angles — that's the defining characteristic of every transverse wave.
This is distinct from a longitudinal wave, where the medium oscillates parallel to the direction of travel — compressions and rarefactions moving along the same axis. Sound is the most familiar longitudinal wave. Seismic P-waves (primary waves) are longitudinal; seismic S-waves (secondary, or shear waves) are transverse — and because S-waves cannot propagate through liquids (liquids can't sustain shear stress), seismologists use the absence of S-waves on the far side of the Earth to infer that the outer core is liquid.
Transverse wave: displacement perpendicular to propagation. Examples: light, all electromagnetic radiation, guitar strings, water surface waves, seismic S-waves.
Longitudinal wave: displacement parallel to propagation. Examples: sound, seismic P-waves, ultrasound.
Electromagnetic waves — light, radio waves, X-rays, microwaves — are transverse waves, but with a key difference: they require no medium. They are oscillating electric and magnetic fields, perpendicular to each other and to the direction of travel, propagating through a vacuum at the speed of light c = 3 × 10⁸ m/s. For more on how Maxwell's equations predict this, see our Electromagnetism guide.
Wave Properties: Amplitude, Wavelength, Frequency, Period
Four quantities describe any periodic wave completely. Understanding what each one represents — and what it doesn't represent — is the foundation of every wave problem.
These four quantities are connected through the fundamental wave speed equation:
A subtle but important point: when a wave moves from one medium to another (say, light entering glass from air), its frequency stays the same — it's fixed by the source. What changes is the speed (and therefore wavelength). This is why refraction happens — wavelength changes, speed changes, direction bends. The frequency remains the fingerprint of the original source.
The Wave Equation — Derived
A sinusoidal transverse wave travelling in the positive x-direction can be written as:
Two new quantities appear here that need defining:
The wave speed in terms of these quantities:
The reason this function describes a wave is that any point of constant phase (where kx − ωt = const) moves at velocity dx/dt = ω/k = v in the positive x-direction. The entire pattern shifts forward at speed v. For a wave moving in the negative x-direction, the sign of ωt flips: y = A sin(kx + ωt).
The Partial Differential Equation
The wave equation in its full mathematical form is a partial differential equation (PDE). For a transverse wave on a string with tension T and linear mass density μ:
v = √(T/μ) explains guitar tuning directly. Tightening a string increases T → increases v → for fixed string length, higher harmonics → higher pitch. Thicker strings (larger μ) decrease v → lower pitch. Pressing a fret shortens the vibrating length, forcing higher frequencies for the same harmonics.
Energy Carried by a Transverse Wave
A wave carries energy from one place to another without net transport of matter. For a sinusoidal transverse wave on a string, the average power (energy per unit time) transmitted is:
Two results stand out here. First, power is proportional to A² — doubling the amplitude quadruples the power (energy). This is true for all wave types, including sound (loudness) and light (intensity). Second, power is proportional to ω² — doubling the frequency at the same amplitude quadruples the power. This is why high-frequency ultrasound is used for deep tissue imaging: it carries more energy per unit amplitude than audible sound.
For a wave spreading out in three dimensions (like light from a point source), the intensity I = P/Area decreases as the wavefront spreads. On a spherical surface of radius r, the area is 4πr², giving the inverse square law: I ∝ 1/r². Doubling your distance from a light source reduces its apparent brightness to one quarter.
Superposition and Interference
The principle of superposition states: when two or more waves overlap in the same medium, the resulting displacement at any point is the algebraic sum of the displacements of each individual wave. The waves pass through each other completely unchanged; the superposition is only local and temporary.
The result of superposition depends on the phase relationship between the waves:
- Constructive interference: waves arrive in phase (crests meet crests). The combined amplitude equals the sum of individual amplitudes. Path difference = nλ where n = 0, 1, 2, …
- Destructive interference: waves arrive exactly out of phase (crests meet troughs). They cancel. Path difference = (n + ½)λ.
- Partial interference: all cases in between, producing a combined amplitude between the two extremes.
Interference is the phenomenon that proves the wave nature of light. Thomas Young's double-slit experiment (1801) produced alternating bright and dark fringes — impossible if light were purely a stream of particles. The interference pattern is a direct map of the wave's phase relationships. See our Optics guide for Young's experiment derived in full.
Standing Waves and Resonance
When a transverse wave reflects off a fixed boundary and overlaps with the incoming wave, the superposition creates a remarkable pattern: a standing wave. Unlike a travelling wave, a standing wave doesn't appear to move — certain points (nodes) are always stationary, and others (antinodes) oscillate with maximum amplitude.
Mathematically, adding two waves of equal amplitude and frequency travelling in opposite directions:
Nodes occur where sin(kx) = 0, i.e., at x = 0, λ/2, λ, 3λ/2, … (separated by λ/2). Antinodes occur where |sin(kx)| = 1, at x = λ/4, 3λ/4, 5λ/4, … (halfway between nodes).
Resonant Frequencies: Strings Fixed at Both Ends
A guitar string fixed at both ends can only sustain standing waves where nodes occur at both fixed endpoints. This means an integer number of half-wavelengths must fit in the string length L:
This is why musical strings produce rich tonal quality: they vibrate simultaneously at f₁ (fundamental), f₂, f₃, and higher harmonics. The relative amplitudes of these harmonics — the timbre — is what makes a violin sound different from a guitar even when playing the same note at the same pitch.
Pipes in wind instruments follow analogous rules. An open pipe (open at both ends) has antinodes at both ends: fₙ = nv/2L, same harmonics as a string. A closed pipe (closed at one end) has a node at the closed end and antinode at the open end — only odd harmonics: fₙ = nv/4L for n = 1, 3, 5, … This is why clarinets (closed-end) sound differently from flutes (open-end) at similar lengths.
Polarization — A Property Only Transverse Waves Have
Polarization is the property that distinguishes transverse waves from longitudinal ones. A transverse wave on a rope can oscillate up-down, left-right, or at any angle — the direction of oscillation relative to the propagation direction is the polarization direction. Longitudinal waves (like sound) have no polarization, because there's only one axis of oscillation: along the direction of travel.
For light, the polarization direction is the direction of the oscillating electric field vector. Ordinary (unpolarized) light from a bulb or the sun has electric field vectors oscillating randomly in all transverse directions simultaneously — a superposition of all polarization angles. Polarized light oscillates in a single, fixed plane.
How Does Polarization Happen?
Three main mechanisms produce polarized light:
- Polarizing filters (linear polarizers): materials (like Polaroid film) that contain molecules aligned in one direction. They absorb electric field components parallel to their absorption axis and transmit those parallel to the transmission axis. The result: linearly polarized light at the output, at half the original intensity.
- Reflection: when light reflects off a flat non-metallic surface at a specific angle (Brewster's angle, θ_B = arctan(n₂/n₁)), the reflected beam is perfectly polarized parallel to the surface. Polarized sunglasses exploit this: they block the s-polarized reflected glare from roads and water.
- Scattering: sky light is partially polarized because atmospheric molecules preferentially scatter polarized components at right angles to the sun. The sky is most polarized at 90° from the sun.
Malus's Law
When polarized light of intensity I₀ passes through a second polarizer (the "analyser") with its transmission axis at angle θ to the light's polarization direction, the transmitted intensity is given by Malus's Law:
The cos²θ factor comes directly from the vector projection of the electric field onto the analyser axis. The electric field component that passes through is E₀ cosθ; since intensity is proportional to E², the transmitted intensity is I₀ cos²θ.
Check the extremes: at θ = 0° (analyser aligned with polarization), cos²0° = 1 — full transmission. At θ = 90° (analyser perpendicular to polarization), cos²90° = 0 — no transmission. This is exactly what you observe when you hold two Polaroid lenses at right angles: complete blackout.
LCD screens work using polarization. Two perpendicular polarizers sandwich a liquid crystal layer. Without a voltage, the liquid crystal rotates the light's polarization direction by 90° — allowing light through the second polarizer. Apply a voltage: the crystal aligns, stops rotating the light, and the pixel goes dark. Every pixel in your screen is a voltage-controlled polarization switch.
Five Worked Examples
Find wavelength, wave number, and period from a wave equation
Compare with y = A sin(kx − ωt): A = 0.04 m, k = 12 rad/m, ω = 48 rad/s
Wavelength: λ = 2π/k = 2π/12 = 0.524 m
Period: T = 2π/ω = 2π/48 = 0.131 s
Frequency: f = 1/T = 7.64 Hz
Wave speed: v = ω/k = 48/12 = 4.0 m/s (or v = fλ = 7.64 × 0.524 = 4.0 m/s ✓)
Write the wave equation for a given wave
ω = 2πf = 2π × 120 = 753.98 rad/s
k = ω/v = 753.98/36 = 20.94 rad/m (or k = 2π/λ, where λ = v/f = 0.3 m → k = 2π/0.3 = 20.94 ✓)
At t=0, x=0: y = A sin(0 − 0 + φ) = 0 and dy/dt > 0 → φ = 0 (sin starts at 0 and rises)
Full equation: y(x,t) = 0.02 sin(20.94x − 753.98t) metres
Guitar string harmonics
Wave speed: v = √(T/μ) = √(75 / 3×10⁻³) = √(25,000) = 158.1 m/s
Fundamental (n=1): f₁ = v/2L = 158.1/(2×0.65) = 158.1/1.3 = 121.6 Hz
Second harmonic (n=2): f₂ = 2f₁ = 243.2 Hz
Third harmonic (n=3): f₃ = 3f₁ = 364.8 Hz
Intensity through two polarizers
After the first polarizer (unpolarized → polarized): intensity is halved. I₁ = I₀/2 = 300 W/m²
Apply Malus's Law for the second polarizer: I₂ = I₁ cos²(35°) = 300 × (0.8192)² = 300 × 0.671 = 201.3 W/m²
Three polarizers — find angle for a target intensity
After P1 (unpolarized→polarized): I₁ = I₀/2 = 400 W/m². Polarization direction: 0°.
After P2 (angle θ from P1): I₂ = I₁ cos²θ = 400 cos²θ. Polarization direction: θ.
After P3 (at 90° from P1, so (90°−θ) from P2): I₃ = I₂ cos²(90°−θ) = 400 cos²θ · sin²θ
Using identity: cos²θ sin²θ = (1/4)sin²(2θ). So I₃ = 100 sin²(2θ). This is maximised when sin²(2θ) = 1, i.e., 2θ = 90° → θ = 45°.
Maximum I₃ = 100 × 1 = 100 W/m². Without the middle polarizer (P1 and P3 at 90°): I = 0. The middle polarizer at 45° allows 12.5% of original light through — from zero!
Transverse vs Longitudinal: A Systematic Comparison
| Property | Transverse Waves | Longitudinal Waves |
|---|---|---|
| Oscillation direction | Perpendicular to propagation | Parallel to propagation |
| Can be polarized? | Yes | No |
| Requires medium? | Not always (EM waves travel in vacuum) | Yes (must compress/expand something) |
| Speed in solids vs liquids | Slower in liquids (shear modulus → 0) | Similar or faster (bulk modulus) |
| Examples | Light, radio waves, seismic S-waves, guitar strings, surface water waves | Sound, seismic P-waves, ultrasound, pressure waves in pipes |
| Mathematical form | y(x,t) = A sin(kx−ωt) perpendicular to x̂ | s(x,t) = A sin(kx−ωt) parallel to x̂ |
Real-World Transverse Waves
- Electromagnetic spectrum: Every form of EM radiation — radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma rays — is a transverse wave. They all travel at c = 3×10⁸ m/s in vacuum and differ only in frequency (and therefore wavelength and energy). The full picture is in our Waves guide.
- Seismology: Seismic S-waves (shear waves) are transverse — the ground oscillates perpendicular to the direction the wave travels. They move at roughly 3.5 km/s in the Earth's crust and cannot pass through the liquid outer core. Seismologists use S-wave shadow zones to map the Earth's interior structure.
- Musical strings: Every stringed instrument — guitar, violin, piano, harp — produces sound through transverse standing waves on strings. The fundamental frequency and harmonics determine pitch and timbre. Changing string tension (tuning), length (fretting), or density (different strings) changes the wave speed and hence the harmonic frequencies.
- Polarized sunglasses: Glare from horizontal surfaces (roads, water) is partially polarized horizontally, because reflection at shallow angles preferentially polarizes in the horizontal plane. Polaroid lenses with a vertical transmission axis selectively block this glare — reducing reflected light without significantly dimming the overall scene.
- Fibre optic communications: Light pulses in optical fibres are transverse EM waves. Polarization-maintaining fibres are used in precision sensing and quantum communication, where polarization state carries information.
Common Misconceptions
- "The medium moves in the direction of the wave." It doesn't — the medium oscillates perpendicular to the direction of wave travel (for transverse waves). The pattern moves forward; the medium oscillates locally and returns to its rest position.
- "Amplitude and wavelength are the same thing." Completely different properties. Amplitude is about how much the medium displaces (determines energy). Wavelength is about how long each cycle is in space (determines the wave's "size" and frequency at a given speed).
- "Light slows down when it changes colour." In vacuum, all visible light travels at exactly c regardless of frequency. In a medium, different frequencies have slightly different speeds (dispersion) — which is why prisms separate white light into a spectrum. But in vacuum, the speed is always c.
- "Standing waves are a different kind of wave." Standing waves are made of two travelling waves superposed. They're not a separate category — they're a consequence of reflection and superposition using the same physics as every other transverse wave.
- "Polarizers block all the light." A single linear polarizer blocks half the intensity of unpolarized light (transmitting the component aligned with the transmission axis). Two polarizers at 90° block all light. But as Example 5 shows, a third polarizer at 45° in between restores partial transmission — a counterintuitive but real result.
Frequently Asked Questions
Explore the Full Waves & Oscillations Guide
Transverse waves are one chapter in a much bigger story. Doppler effect, diffraction, interference, and the electromagnetic spectrum are all waiting in the complete topic guide.
Waves & Oscillations Guide → Optics: Reflection & RefractionSources & Further Reading
- Halliday, D., Resnick, R., & Krane, K. S. (2002). Physics (5th ed., Vol. 1). Wiley. Chapter 17: Waves — I & Chapter 18: Waves — II.
- French, A. P. (1971). Vibrations and Waves. MIT Introductory Physics Series. W. W. Norton. Chapters 7–9: Travelling and Standing Waves.
- Hecht, E. (2017). Optics (5th ed.). Pearson. Chapter 8: Polarization of Light — including derivation of Malus's Law.
- Crawford, F. S. (1968). Waves. Berkeley Physics Course Vol. 3. McGraw-Hill. Chapters 1–3: Wave Motion from first principles.
- Griffiths, D. J. (2017). Introduction to Electrodynamics (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Chapter 9: Electromagnetic Waves — why EM waves are transverse.