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Energy does not effect WAVELENGTH, it effects the AMPLITUDE of the Wave.
it does stuff that other stuff does to it like a junk stuff that nobody will use
Amplitude has to do with sound. Vibrating air creates sound using amplitude which is the size of the vibration, and how loud it is. Frequency is the speed of the vibration. The higher the speed, the higher the sound and vice-versa. Amplitude has no effect on wave speed as relates to sound. I believe the same holds for waves of water. Amplitude or size of the wave effects its impact, not its speed.
Simple Case:For simple waves, changing the amplitude does not change any other basic wave characteristic, e.g. frequency, wavelength.Amplitude is usually associated with the quantification of how much stuff is waving or how strongly it is waving, e.g. water waves and sound waves. It nearly always then is a measure of the energy of a wave which is usually proportional to the square of the amplitude. For sound and similar waves we say a change of amplitude changes the intensity of the wave.More complex Cases:The basic characteristics of a simple harmonic wave are the amplitude, frequency and wavelength., There are further longitudinal and transverse waves, so the direction of associated with the movement of whatever is oscillating is another characteristic.The amplitude of a wave is the measure of the maximum magnitude of whatever is oscillation. For simple harmonic waves, there is a sinusoidally varying quantity which is the amplitude. When the amplitude changes, it is just that magnitude changing or such simple waves. As stated above, this is usually associated with a change of energy or intensity.For some waves, particularly those which are not simple harmonic waves, change in amplitude can cause other effects. These are called nonlinear effects.A few examples are known from daily life. A ripple on the surface of water does not have the same properties as a giant ocean wave. In the case of water, amplitude does alter wavelength and frequency. The character of a wave changes. The electrical waves traveling through the electrical circuit of an amplifier for a loudspeaker system have properties that are not simply proportional to amplitude of the signal can can produce those loud screeching noises and distortions. People who wear glasses which darken in bright sunlight are experiencing a nonlinear effect. Even the oscillation of a pendulum is nonlinear with the period of the pendulum changing as the amplitude increases.
Usually, people are asking as if there is just "the" amplitude in sound waves in air. The loudness perception of a sound is determined by the amplitude of the sound waves − the higher the amplitude, the louder the sound. Which amplitude of sound (sound amplitude) do you mean? There are: amplitude of particle displacement ξ, or displacement amplitude amplitude of sound pressure p or pressure amplitude amplitude of sound particle velocity v, or particle velocity amplitude amplitude of pressure gradient Δ p, or pressure gradient amplitude. Furthermore, think of the amplitude of the oscillation of a string. The maximum magnitude of the deflection of a wave is called amplitude. Look at link: "What is an amplitude?"
You seem to be talking about a light wave. If you increase the amplitude the light gets brighter, and if you decrease it gets dimmer. Amplitude has no effect on colour.
You seem to be talking about a light wave. If you increase the amplitude the light gets brighter, and if you decrease it gets dimmer. Amplitude has no effect on colour.
You seem to be talking about a light wave. If you increase the amplitude the light gets brighter, and if you decrease it gets dimmer. Amplitude has no effect on colour.
b/c information lies in frequency... while in AM information lies in amplitude and noise effects the amplitude more as compare to frequency....... there for.....
it does stuff that other stuff does to it like a junk stuff that nobody will use
Energy does not effect WAVELENGTH, it effects the AMPLITUDE of the Wave.
Amplitude has to do with sound. Vibrating air creates sound using amplitude which is the size of the vibration, and how loud it is. Frequency is the speed of the vibration. The higher the speed, the higher the sound and vice-versa. Amplitude has no effect on wave speed as relates to sound. I believe the same holds for waves of water. Amplitude or size of the wave effects its impact, not its speed.
black
Yes, it does
Yes it has colour effects I'm quite sure.
Simple Case:For simple waves, changing the amplitude does not change any other basic wave characteristic, e.g. frequency, wavelength.Amplitude is usually associated with the quantification of how much stuff is waving or how strongly it is waving, e.g. water waves and sound waves. It nearly always then is a measure of the energy of a wave which is usually proportional to the square of the amplitude. For sound and similar waves we say a change of amplitude changes the intensity of the wave.More complex Cases:The basic characteristics of a simple harmonic wave are the amplitude, frequency and wavelength., There are further longitudinal and transverse waves, so the direction of associated with the movement of whatever is oscillating is another characteristic.The amplitude of a wave is the measure of the maximum magnitude of whatever is oscillation. For simple harmonic waves, there is a sinusoidally varying quantity which is the amplitude. When the amplitude changes, it is just that magnitude changing or such simple waves. As stated above, this is usually associated with a change of energy or intensity.For some waves, particularly those which are not simple harmonic waves, change in amplitude can cause other effects. These are called nonlinear effects.A few examples are known from daily life. A ripple on the surface of water does not have the same properties as a giant ocean wave. In the case of water, amplitude does alter wavelength and frequency. The character of a wave changes. The electrical waves traveling through the electrical circuit of an amplifier for a loudspeaker system have properties that are not simply proportional to amplitude of the signal can can produce those loud screeching noises and distortions. People who wear glasses which darken in bright sunlight are experiencing a nonlinear effect. Even the oscillation of a pendulum is nonlinear with the period of the pendulum changing as the amplitude increases.
Usually, people are asking as if there is just "the" amplitude in sound waves in air. The loudness perception of a sound is determined by the amplitude of the sound waves − the higher the amplitude, the louder the sound. Which amplitude of sound (sound amplitude) do you mean? There are: amplitude of particle displacement ξ, or displacement amplitude amplitude of sound pressure p or pressure amplitude amplitude of sound particle velocity v, or particle velocity amplitude amplitude of pressure gradient Δ p, or pressure gradient amplitude. Furthermore, think of the amplitude of the oscillation of a string. The maximum magnitude of the deflection of a wave is called amplitude. Look at link: "What is an amplitude?"