Wave frequency can be calculated by dividing the speed of the wave (if we're talking about electromagnetic waves in vacuum, that would be the speed of light, c) by wavelength.
Wavelength*Frequency = Velocity of the wave. or Wavelength/Period = Velocity of the wave.
The wavelength will increase if the period increases.Proof:First define the terms: Wavelength = Lamda (λ), Velocity of propagation = v, frequency = f, period of oscillation = T. Frequency asks "how many waves per unit time (seconds usually)".Period asks "How much time (seconds) does it take for one wave cycle to complete".Also, frequency is inversely proportional to period, so f = 1/T. Also, T = 1/f.(Incidentally, note that as period (T) increases, then frequency (f) gets decreases. Or if frequency increases, then period decreases.)λ = v/forλ = vT. (by replacing f with 1/T)If the frequency decreases, OR/AND the velocity increases, then wavelength corespondingly increases.If the period increases OR/AND the velocity increases, then the wavelength increases.
The speed or velocity of a wave is equal to the wavelength times the frequency. The period (amount of time for one wavelength to occur) is equal to 1 over the frequency (the inverse of its frequency).
The period is 4 [insert units here]. To get to this answer you use the equation v= λ*ƒ which basically means velocity is equal to lambda (wavelength) times frequency. Next you insert the speed where velocity is then you insert the wavelength and try to find the frequency. Once you get the frequency which should be 1/4 Hz then you use the proportion: period ~ 1/frequency and then you know that the period is 4.
Period = 1 / (frequency) = 1 / 6th of a second = [166 and 2/3] millisecondsSpeed = (wavelength) x (frequency) = 6 x 3 = [18] meters per second
Wavelength*Frequency = Velocity of the wave. or Wavelength/Period = Velocity of the wave.
you find out a waves speed by taking the wavelength and divide it by it's wave period or how long it takes for the wave to complete a full wavelength. This is what my textbook said. Speed=Wavelength ×Frequency
The speed of the wave is equal to wavelength x frequency. You can calculate the frequency, in this case, as 1 / period.
Wavelength.
The period is defined as: the time needed to complete one cycle.Frequency is the number of cycles per second .that's where the relation came from ...the mathematics representation of the relation is : frequency = 1/period orperiod = 1/frequency .hope u got it.
# time period # frequency # amplitude
The wavelength will increase if the period increases.Proof:First define the terms: Wavelength = Lamda (λ), Velocity of propagation = v, frequency = f, period of oscillation = T. Frequency asks "how many waves per unit time (seconds usually)".Period asks "How much time (seconds) does it take for one wave cycle to complete".Also, frequency is inversely proportional to period, so f = 1/T. Also, T = 1/f.(Incidentally, note that as period (T) increases, then frequency (f) gets decreases. Or if frequency increases, then period decreases.)λ = v/forλ = vT. (by replacing f with 1/T)If the frequency decreases, OR/AND the velocity increases, then wavelength corespondingly increases.If the period increases OR/AND the velocity increases, then the wavelength increases.
The speed or velocity of a wave is equal to the wavelength times the frequency. The period (amount of time for one wavelength to occur) is equal to 1 over the frequency (the inverse of its frequency).
Period = (1) divided by (frequency) = (wavelength) divided by (speed)Frequency = (1) divided by (period) = (speed) divided by (period)Speed = (wavelength) times (frequency) = (wavelength) divided by (period)Wavelength = (speed) divided by (frequency) = (speed) times (period)
The period is 4 [insert units here]. To get to this answer you use the equation v= λ*ƒ which basically means velocity is equal to lambda (wavelength) times frequency. Next you insert the speed where velocity is then you insert the wavelength and try to find the frequency. Once you get the frequency which should be 1/4 Hz then you use the proportion: period ~ 1/frequency and then you know that the period is 4.
It is not possible to answer this question numerically because the velocity of the wave also needs to be known. The three following equations are equivalent. velocity = wavelength x frequency wavelength = velocity / frequency frequency = velocity / wavelength The correct unit for frequency is Hz (Hertz) although this is the same as the old "cycles per second". Wavelength is measured in metres and velocity in metres/second.
The characteristics of a sound wave is the Amplitude, Frequency, Wavelength, time period, and velocity. The sound wave itself is a longitudinal wave that shows the rarefactions and compressions of a sound wave.