Longitudinal wave
A wave in which particles oscillate parallel to the direction of energy transfer, alternating between compression and rarefaction. Sound waves are the most common example; air molecules oscillate back-and-forth along the sound ray direction. Longitudinal waves cannot be polarised.
Real World
Ultrasound imaging in hospitals uses longitudinal sound waves at 1–20 MHz that travel through body tissue, reflecting at boundaries between organs to build up a foetal scan image.
Exam Focus
If asked why sound cannot be polarised, link it directly to particle oscillation being parallel to wave travel.
How well did you know this?