No. The higher the frequency the shorter the wavelength, v=fw.
Wave velocity in general = frequency x wavelength As the velocity of the wave remains constant then frequency and wavelength are inversely related So as the wavelength becomes shorter then frequency becomes larger or higher
speed=frequency x wavelenth xD
wave speed= frequency/wavelenth
just had this on a test, the answer is Temperature
The physical length, short wavelengths are shorter than long wavelengthsThe frequency, short wavelengths are higher frequency than long wavelengthsThe energy per photon, short wavelengths have more energy per photon than long wavelengths
v = frequency x wavelength v is the velocity of the wavelength
Speed = (frequency) x (wavelength) = (2) x (2) = 4 meters per second.There's not enough information to calculate 'velocity'.
No, the frequency decreases as the wavelength lengthens. The shorter the wavelength the higher the frequency.
Velocity of wave = Frequency X Wavelength So if Velocity of the wave is kept constant, then Frequency of the wave is inversely proportional to it's wavelength i.e increase in frequency means decreases in Wavelength.
The relationship between frequency and wavelength is shown by the equation: v= f (lambda) where v is velocity, f is frequency, and lambda is wavelength. The wavelenth is the distance between two analogous points in the wave (ie. two peaks, or two troughs), and the frequency is the number of wavelenths per second.
The meaning of a high frequency wave is a shorter wavelength.For electromagnetic waves in general (including light):* At greater frequencies, you get shorter wavelengths.* At greater frequencies, you get more energy per photon.
The shorter the wavelength is, the higher the frequency will be and the longer the wavelength is, the lower the frequency will be.