Yes, in some ki Martial Arts there is a technique called the Kamehameha.
BUT KEEP READING!If you spend at least three years practicing and mastered the technique, don't expect a giant blue ki blast to come out of your hands. No ki ball or blast is visible, unless you are gathering heat.The Kamehameha Wave is a fictional energy attack from the Dragon Ball series created by Akira Toriyama. It is primarily associated with the character Son Goku.
No, the wave at sporting events is not an example of a real wave in nature. The wave at sporting events involves fans standing up and sitting down in sequence, creating a visual effect that travels around the stadium.
The future tense of "wave" is "will wave" or "shall wave." For example, "I will wave to you tomorrow."
The amount of energy wave power can produce per hour varies depending on factors such as the intensity of the waves, the size of the wave energy converter, and the efficiency of the system. On average, a single wave energy converter can produce around 25-50 kilowatt-hours per hour in optimal conditions.
Transverse waves are those where the movement is perpendicular to the direction of the wave and Longitudinal waves move parallel to the direction of travel.Longitudinal waves also known as compression waves require a medium through which to travel and can travel through solids, liquids and gasses (a sound wave is a type of longitudinal wave). Longitudinal waves look like this:| | | | | | | |A special type of transverse wave known as an electromagnetic wave can travel through a vacuum (they don't require a medium) and an example of this type of wave would be a radio wave or X-ray (or for that matter light). However transverse mechanical waves (such as the S-wave produced during an earthquake) are only able to travel through solids. This is the type of wave you see. Transverse waves look like this:\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\.A longitudinal wave travels by pressure gradients, and are usually omnidirectional. Once emitted they travel outward spherically. Longitudinal waves require a material to travel through. A stretched spring held at both ends, compressed from the center to either end, and released will demonstrate a longitudinal wave. Transverse waves are carried along perpendicular to line of travel. They are very linear and don't require a medium to travel through. A jump rope "whipped" from one held end to another demonstrates a transverse wave.
no it is not
since kamehameha is a fiction move on dragon ball z you cant really do a kamehameha wave in real life lol
Kamehameha = "giant turtle wave"
To do a real kamehameha move, you must wave your hands a sertain wave motion with your arms and make to motion with your hand close to your waist, then charge with all your power, then a light blue ball apperes in your set of hand, then shoot it at you foe with RAGE!! See the wave motion on http://www.youtube.com/.
There are actually two colors of Goku's kamehameha wave. In Dragonball and Dragonball Z Goku uses his orignal kamehameha wave which is always a light blue color. In Dragonball GT Goku uses a new kamehameha move called Kamehameha times ten (x10) which turns his kamehameha waves red insend of light blue.
pliss :(
no master roshi made it
You cannot. The Kamehameha is an entirely fictional idea.
goku learns the kamehameha on the movie path of power (Edit: Goku first performs a kamehameha wave in the 8th episode of dragon ball)
yes u can do it because there is someu can thing called kamehameha you can used it with a magnifing glass with the solar power of the sun
Go to Japan.
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