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Well, I wasn't actually there, so I didn't observe anything. But from my education and personal experience, I know that the product of the wavelength and frequency of any wave is the wave's speed. So I should expect that the product of wavelength and frequency for any color of light, and for that matter, any electromagnetic wave, is always the same number, and ought to always be very close to the speed of light in the medium in which you observed it, or would have observed it had you been there.
The speed of a wave is the product of its wavelength and its frequency.
The product of (frequency) times (wavelength) is always the same number ... it's the speed of the wave. So if the frequency increases, the wavelength must decrease, to keep the product constant.
Frequency and wavelength are inversely proportional. Their product is always the speed of the wave;it doesn't change, regardless of the frequency/wavelength.
The product of (wavelength) x (frequency) is always equal to the wave's speed.
The product of a wave's frequency and its wavelength is always its speed.
Well, I wasn't actually there, so I didn't observe anything. But from my education and personal experience, I know that the product of the wavelength and frequency of any wave is the wave's speed. So I should expect that the product of wavelength and frequency for any color of light, and for that matter, any electromagnetic wave, is always the same number, and ought to always be very close to the speed of light in the medium in which you observed it, or would have observed it had you been there.
The product of a wave's frequency and its wavelength is always its speed.
The product of (wavelength) times (frequency) is the speed.
The product of (wavelength x frequency) is the wave's speed.
The speed of a wave is the product of its wavelength and its frequency.
Yes, velocity equals the product of frequency times wavelength, v=fw.
The speed of any wave is the product of (wavelength) x (frequency) .
The product of (frequency) times (wavelength) is always the same number ... it's the speed of the wave. So if the frequency increases, the wavelength must decrease, to keep the product constant.
The speed is the product of wavelength and frequency.
Frequency and wavelength are inversely proportional. Their product is always the speed of the wave;it doesn't change, regardless of the frequency/wavelength.
what can you obsereve with the values of the product of frequency and wavelenht