The mid-band gain is the gain of a range of frequencies that lie beween the lower frequncy and the upper frequency.
The center frequnecy is the geometric mean between the lower frequncy and the Upper frequnecy. In resonant circuits it is the frequnecy where the gain is at maximum.
Yes, the resonant frequency is the same as the natural frequency.
No, the natural frequency and resonant frequency are not the same. The natural frequency is the frequency at which an object vibrates when disturbed, while the resonant frequency is the frequency at which an object vibrates most strongly when subjected to external forces.
the frequency is less than OR EQUAL TO the cumulative frequency
Almost the same frequency and are sounded together.
Yes.
They're not. The same amplitude can have high or low frequency, and the same frequency can have large or small amplitude.
Same as what?
A histogram efficiently presents the same information as the frequency distribution in one visual image and gives all the relevant details in an intuitive format (center, variation, distribution shape, outlier, and time = CVDOT).
Some advantages are:As the frequency increases, the so does the data transfer speeds.The gain and directivity of the transmission antenna will increase for the the same size.Although signals experience more attenuation at high frequency, this could be advantageous for covert purposes.Ultimately, each band has certain limitations, depending on what the FCC has them dedicated for. So higher frequency could be great, but could be power limited.
No, the natural frequency and resonance frequency of a cantilever beam are not necessarily the same. The natural frequency is the frequency at which a system oscillates without any external forces, while the resonance frequency is the frequency at which a system is most responsive to external forces. In a cantilever beam, the resonance frequency is typically higher than the natural frequency.
Yes
Velocity equals frequency times wavelength. If frequency is constant, velocity is proportional to wavelength; one increases at the same rate as the other.