they are related by the equation velocity=frequency*wavelength
Frequency is equal to speed divided by wavelength.
speed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelength
Light with a lower frequency will have a longer wavelength. Frequency and wavelength are inversely proportional to each other (i.e. as one increases, the other decreases and vice-a-versa). The product of frequency and wavelength is the speed of light.
For any point on the electromagnetic spectrum, the product of(wavelength) multiplied by (frequency) is 299,792,458 meters per second.That's the speed of the wave.
the speed of light equals the frequency multiplied by the wavelength.
Wavelength.
You know its speed in vacuum, and frequency = (speed) / (wavelength) .
speed = frequency x wavelength
No. They're related by the definitions of the wave's speed, wavelength, and frequency.
frequency = speed of wave / wavelength so if speed is constant then frequency varies inversely with wavelength
(Wavelength) x (Frequency) = (the Wave's Speed).
Frequency = speed of light / wavelength
(frequency) multiplied by (wavelength) = (speed of the wave)
The product of (wavelength) x (frequency) is always equal to the wave's speed.
Yes - The speed is equal to the product of the frequency and wavelength,but you have to be careful how you think about that. The speed doesn't dependon the frequency or wavelength.
Amplitude, speed, and wavelength or frequency. (Wavelength and frequency are related by the wave's speed.)
Whatever the wavelength and frequency happen to be, their product is always equal to the speed.
The wavelength is the equal to the speed divided by the frequency. Hence: λ = v/f
Speed of sound c is frequncy f times wavelength lambda. c = f times lambda Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion: frequency f to wavelength lambda and wavelength to frequency".