No it doesn't. Do you have any more questions ?
No, it does not.
Neither the speed of light in air is going to stay the same no matter what wavelength or frequency is.
Speed of sound does not depend on frequency f, nor on wavelength λ, but on temperature T, and not on atmospheric pressure p.
Yes, slightly, because the refractive index of air depends somewhat
on the air temperature (as well as the pressure and humidity).
No it doesn't. Do you have any more questions ?
No, it does not.
No.
Light with a lower frequency will have a longer wavelength. Frequency and wavelength are inversely proportional to each other (i.e. as one increases, the other decreases and vice-a-versa). The product of frequency and wavelength is the speed of light.
the speed of light equals the frequency multiplied by the wavelength.
No.
c=lamda*f c is a constant, which is the speed of light, lamda is the wavelength which the light is traveling at, and f is the frequency of the light. All light travels at the speed of light no matter what colour, however ever colour tavels at different wavelengths and frequencies.
The speed of the light decreases, and its wavelength increases by the same factor.
That would also depend on the speed of the wave. Speed = wavelength x frequency.That would also depend on the speed of the wave. Speed = wavelength x frequency.That would also depend on the speed of the wave. Speed = wavelength x frequency.That would also depend on the speed of the wave. Speed = wavelength x frequency.
Wavelength times frequency is the speed. To know the wavelength, you have to divide the speed by the frequency of the light.
The equation relating the velocity, wavelength and frequency of an electromagnetic wave is given byv=f λwhere v - velocity of the em wavef - frequency of the em wave andλ - wavelength of the em wave------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------It is so important to know that velocity of light depends on the nature of the medium and does not depend on the wavelength.
Light with a lower frequency will have a longer wavelength. Frequency and wavelength are inversely proportional to each other (i.e. as one increases, the other decreases and vice-a-versa). The product of frequency and wavelength is the speed of light.
Wavelength times frequency is the speed. To know the wavelength, you have to divide the speed by the frequency of the light.
the speed of light equals the frequency multiplied by the wavelength.
wavelength = speed of light/frequency so we rearrange frequency = speed of light/wavelength Hopefully you can figure it out from here...
There is no "measurement of light". The units used depend on what you want to measure: its speed, frequency, wavelength, energy per photon, etc.
No.
Yes.
Frequency = speed of light / wavelength
the amount of scattering does not depend on wavelength..