The greater the amplitude, the higher the crests and lower the troughs.
The amplitude of sound is measured in bells, though, more commonly, decibels. 1 decibel is the faintest whisper and 10 is the equivalent of a front row rock concert (or something along those lines).
well if this is any help...The loudest scream was 128 decibels at a distance of 8ft. 2in. That's a world record
Frequency is 1 of 3 variables that determine wave energy. The other two are amplitude and velocity.
amplitude is the height of the wave from the middle point, it can be either from the middle to the bottom, or middle to the top of the wave. the frequency is how frequent the crests of each wave (the amplitude) pass a given point. so how they relate is, the highest point/lowest point is the crest, and the that is the amplitude is the ends of the crests ============================================ (In other words, to paraphrase the above remarks, there is no relationship between the amplitude and frequency of a wave. Either characteristic may be changed with no effect on the other.)
In Decibels
Decibels probably
Decibels probably
Usually in decibels (dB)
The greater the amplitude, the higher the crests and lower the troughs.
If you measure amplitude, then it's decibels (dB). If you measure frequency, then it's Hertz (Hz).
amplitude
loudness, number of decibels, magnitude, amplitude, intensity, pitch
AM = Amplitude Modulation. FM = Frequency Modulation
the color of light radiating that heat from it feels good
There are several words, depending on exactly what is being measured (e.g. amplitude, volume, sound pressure, decibels).
The amplitude of sound is measured in bells, though, more commonly, decibels. 1 decibel is the faintest whisper and 10 is the equivalent of a front row rock concert (or something along those lines).