Question:

How are tsunami waves different from normal ocean waves?

by Guest9899  |  12 years, 8 month(s) ago

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I want to know, How are tsunami waves different from normal ocean waves. Can any one answer my query?

 Tags: normal, ocean, tsunami, Waves

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  1. Guest7087
    Both normal ocean waves and tsunami waves can be described by their period, wavelength, amplitude and speed. Normal ocean waves are caused by the wind, weather, tides, and currents. They have periods of 5-20 seconds, wavelengths of 100-200 meters and travel at speeds of 8-100 km per hour. Tsunami waves have much longer periods of 10 minutes to 2 hours, wavelengths of 100-500 km and travel at speeds of 800-1000 km per hour. The amplitude of normal waves and tsunami waves are similar in deep ocean water, but near shore, tsunami waves can be much larger with heights of 10 meters or more. Furthermore, normal ocean waves only involve motion of the uppermost layer of the water, but tsunami waves involve movement of the entire water column from surface to seafloor. This means a normal wave is like a small ripple on top of the ocean, but tsunamis are like the entire ocean getting deeper all at once.

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