To get the wavelength of a wave simply divide the wavespeed with its frequency.
The wavelength of a wave is the distance from the crest to the next crest of a wave, usually measured in metres. A wavelength is not a unit.
A wavelength of 15 feet yields a base of about 7.5 feet. The wave base of a wave (the depth to which it moves water) is about 1/2 the wavelength.
Divided the wave's speed by its wavelength.
Tha wave base would be about 5 feet, as it is about 1/2 of the wavelength.
Find the distance of the wave length and divide by 2. Example: Wave length = 10 Half= 5 Hope this helps! I"m currently doing homework on hydrology! Good Luck! (:
wave length = wave speed divided by its frequency
v=fλ where f is the frequency, and λ is the wavelength
A wavelength doesn't have energy. The wave does. The details depend on the type of wave. Assuming an electromagnetic wave, you have to multiply the frequency by Plank's constant. To find the frequency, divide the speed of the wave by the wavelength.
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
Period = Wavelength / Velocity
Wave Length. Abbr. WL (:
Multiply its frequency by its wavelength.
Type Answer here.........
Wavelength = velocity / frequency
Frequency = (wave speed) divided by (wavelength)Wavelength = (wave speed) divided by (frequency)Wave speed = (frequency) multiplied by (wavelength)
The wave speed equation proposes that: v = fw; where "v" is the wave's velocity, "f" is the wave's frequency, and "w" (more notably used as lambda) is the wave's wavelength. Manipulating the equation and solving for wavelength yields: w = v/f. Thus, if one knows both the velocity and frequency of a wave, he/she can divide velocity by frequency to determine the corresponding wave's wavelength.
The distance between successive identical parts of a wave is called the wave length.