For any wave:
wavelength x frequency = speed
Speed of light, in this case.
For any wave:
wavelength x frequency = speed
Speed of light, in this case.
For any wave:
wavelength x frequency = speed
Speed of light, in this case.
For any wave:
wavelength x frequency = speed
Speed of light, in this case.
The higher the frequency, the shorter is the wavelength.
frequency/wavelength=speed of the wave
The speed in vacuum is the speed of the light.
For any wave:
wavelength x frequency = speed
Speed of light, in this case.
c = wavelength x frequency, where c = speed of light, which is 299,792,458m/sKnown: c and frequencyUnknown: wavelengthWavelength = c/frequency = (299,792,458m/s)/(3,000,000/s) = 99.9mIt is in the radio region of the electromagnetic spectrum.See the related link below.
Electromagnetic radiation is a continuous spectrum of wavelengths from thousands of kilometres to wavelengths the size of fractions of an atom. They are all the same kind of radiation - the differences are only the wavelengths. They range from the longest - radio waves, then microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultra violet light, X-rays and gamma rays. The sun emits all of these apart from gamma rays.
Those are all examples of electromagnetic radiation ... the same physical phenomenonbut with different wavelengths (frequencies) and different made-up names.
No. Both are examples of electromagnetic radiation. The only difference between them is their respective frequencies (wavelengths). Both travel at the speed that we call the "speed of light" . . . 300,000,000 meters (186,282 miles) per second.
AnswerA gamma ray is a form of electromagnetic energy, and it is found at the extreme end of the electromagnetic spectrum above X-rays, whose wavelengths overlap a bit. Gamma rays have wavelengths on the order of 10-11 meters (or 10 picometers) and less (shorter). This corresponds to frequencies of 30 x 1018 Hz and up, and energies of 100 keV and up. Gamma rays are produced by subatomic particle interactions, and this type of radiation is a form of ionizing radiation with considerable penetration power.AnswerThe wavelength refers to the distance that the wave travels before repeating itself; that is, wavelength is measured in meters per cycle, whereas frequency is measured in cycles per second. The frequency and wavelength will always be related by [ Frequency * Wavelength = c (speed of light) ]. Gama Rays (and all other forms of EM radiation) are both particles and waves. Quantum physics is required to understand why that is. Wavelength has nothing to do with the quantity of light (intensity) or velocity (which is always exactly c). A single photon will behave like a particle, so frequency and wavelength don't have much meaning, but when large quantities of photons are observed, their interactions are best modeled by waves.
Electromagnetic radiation E= hf is characterized by its frequency, f.
Energy = hf where h is Planck's Constant and f is the radiation frequency.
The energy PER PHOTON is directly proportional to the frequency.
For any wave, (wavelength) times (frequency) = (speed of propagation).For electromagnetic waves, (wavelength) times (frequency) = (speed of 'light')
The human eye can only detect electromagnetic radiation in the visible spectrum, Typically, wavelengths of 390 to 750 nm fall within the visible spectrum. Radiation with these wavelengths are called visible light or simply light.
The speed of electromagnetic radiation (light) in a vacuum is a constant, independent of frequency or wavelength. However in a medium (e.g. glass, water, air, diamond) it is no longer a constant, allowing the colors to be separated into a spectrum.
yes frequency = 1/radiation
The energy of one photon is given by its frequency X planck's constant Its frequency is given by the speed of light divided by the wavelength.
The categories of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum, in the ascending order of their frequencies are:RadioMicrowaveInfraredVisibleUltravioletX-rayGammaHence, Radio waves have the lowest frequency and the longest wavelengths while Gamma rays have the highest frequency and the shortest wavelengths.(check related link for an image)
Your a butt face
The electromagnetic spectrum is the full range of known electromagnetic radiation, ranging from radio waves to gamma rays. Radio waves are at one end of the spectrum with the longest wavelength and the lowest frequency. Gamma rays at the other end have the shortest wavelength and the highest frequency. (frequency = wave oscillations per second) Most electromagnetic radiation can fall into one of the following categories: Radiowave Microwave Infrared Visible (light) Ultraviolet X-rays Gamma Rays [This list is in increasing order of frequency)
it is related by blood