Kondratiev wave

(noun)

A supposed cycle-like phenomena in the modern world economy, the period of which ranges from forty to sixty years with the cycles consisting of alternating intervals between high sectoral growth and relatively slow growth.

Related Terms

  • Kondratiev
  • Start-ups
  • NASDAQ

Examples of Kondratiev wave in the following topics:

  • The "New Economy" of the 1990s

    • According to another point of view, the "new economy" is a current Kondratiev wave which will end after a 50-year period in the 2040s; its innovative basis includes the Internet, nanotechnologies, telematics, and bionics.
  • Spherical and Plane Waves

    • Constructive interference occurs when waves are completely in phase with each other and amplifies the waves.
    • Since the waves all come from one point source, the waves happen in a spherical pattern.
    • It is not possible in practice to have a true plane wave; only a plane wave of infinite extent will propagate as a plane wave.
    • However, many waves are approximately plane waves in a localized region of space.
    • When waves are produced from a point source, they are spherical waves.
  • Longitudinal Waves

    • An example of a longitudinal wave is a sound wave.
    • Some longitudinal waves are also called compressional waves or compression waves.
    • Like transverse waves, longitudinal waves do not displace mass.
    • Longitudinal waves can sometimes also be conceptualized as pressure waves.
    • The most common pressure wave is the sound wave.
  • Longitudinal and Transverse Waves

    • Most kinds of waves are transverse waves.
    • But sound waves are not transverse.
    • Sound waves are longitudinal waves.
    • A mathematical description might be that in longitudinal waves, the waves (the disturbances) are along the same axis as the direction of motion of the wave; transverse waves are at right angles to the direction of motion of the wave.
    • In water waves and other transverse waves, the ups and downs are in a different direction from the forward movement of the wave.
  • Water Waves

    • Water waves can be commonly observed in daily life, and comprise both transverse and longitudinal wave motion.
    • The uniqueness of water waves is found in the observation that they comprise both transverse and longitudinal wave motion.
    • As long as the waves propagate slower than the wind speed just above the waves, there is an energy transfer from the wind to the waves.
    • Since water waves transport energy, attempts to generate power from them have been made by utilizing the physical motion of such waves.
    • Although larger waves are more powerful, wave power is also determined by wave speed, wavelength, and water density.
  • Standing Waves on a String

    • Standing wave occurs due to the interference when transverse waves in strings are reflected and the incident and reflected waves meet.
    • When a transverse wave meets a fixed end, the wave is reflected, but inverted.
    • When either of the two scenarios of wave reflection occurs, the incident wave meets the reflected wave.
    • When the incident wave and reflected wave first meet, both waves have an amplitude is zero.
    • When a transverse wave meets a fixed end, the wave is reflected, but inverted.
  • Reflections

    • When transverse waves in strings meet one end, they are reflected, and when the incident wave meets the reflected wave, interference occurs.
    • The wave that occurs due to this motion is called a transverse wave.
    • When a transverse wave meets a fixed end, the wave is reflected, but inverted.
    • When either of the two scenarios of wave reflection occurs, the incident wave meets the reflected wave.
    • To understand how standing waves occur, we can analyze them further: When the incident wave and reflected wave first meet, both waves have an amplitude is zero.
  • What is a Standing Wave?

    • Most sound waves, including the musical sounds that actually reach our ears, are not standing waves.
    • Normally, when something makes a wave, the wave travels outward, gradually spreading out and losing strength, like the waves moving away from a pebble dropped into a pond.
    • But what if you could arrange the waves so that reflecting waves, instead of cancelling out the new waves, would reinforce them?
    • Instead, waves would seem to be appearing and disappearing regularly at exactly the same spots, so these trapped waves are called standing waves.
    • A noise is a jumble of sound waves.
  • Waves

    • A sea wave is an example of a wave in which water molecules are moving up and down as waves propagate towards the shore.
    • Waves transfer energy not mass.
    • While mechanical waves can be both transverse and longitudinal, all electromagnetic waves are transverse.
    • The description of waves is closely related to their physical origin for each specific instance of a wave process.
    • A brief introduction to the wave equation, discussing wave velocity, frequency, wavelength, and period.
  • Transverse Waves

    • Light is an example of a transverse wave.
    • For transverse waves in matter, the displacement of the medium is perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the wave.
    • A ripple on a pond and a wave on a string are easily visualized transverse waves.
    • Transverse waves are waves that are oscillating perpendicularly to the direction of propagation.
    • Therefore an electromagnetic wave consists of two transverse waves, visible light being an example of an electromagnetic wave.
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