To calculate the frequency density we will simply divide the frequency by the class width.
frequency density = frequency/group width
class width times frequency density gives you the frequency
Frequency density= Frequency/Class width So shut ur mouth whoever is reading this!
No.
Frequency Density multiplied by the class width
Yes.
Frequency is equal to inverse of the square root of density. As the frequency of a string for example goes up the density will go down but in a non-linear fashion. That is to create higher and higher frequencies less and less density decreases are required.
The frequency density. That is, the frequency divided by the class width.
probability density distribution
basically this is an exampleAGE (YEARS) FREQUENCY FREQUENCY DENSITYFD= Frequency DensityAge : 0
If strings with different density are used, the oscillating frequency will change, assuming that tension is maintained the same. With higher density, the frequency will go down; with lower density, the frequency will go up.The equation for frequency1 is ...f = k * tension0.5 / length / mass-per-unit-length0.5... so the frequency is inversely proportional to the square root of mass per unit length, which is related to density.--------------------------------------------------1"The Science of Musical Sound", John R. Pierce, Scientific American Library, 1983, page 22.