As the frequency goes up, the wavelength decreases. Their
product is always the same number . . . the wave's speed.
If you multiply the wavelength (in meters) and the frequency (in Hertz), you will get the speed of the wave (in meters per second).
your mom happenens.
The wavelength would increase in direct proportion to the speed.
If you are talking about an electromagnetic wave; energy is proportional to frequency (E=hf), and frequency is inversely proportional to wavelength (wavelength equals velocity divided by frequency). So when the wavelength is increased, the energy is decreased.
If frequency is multiplied by three, wavelength is divided by three. Higher frequency, shorter wavelength.
Wavelength shortens as frequendcy increases.
When the wavelength (λ) increases, the frequency (v) decreases. When the λ goes down, the v goes up.
The freequency of a wave is increased when the wavelength is decreased. This is because the product of the frequency and the wavelength are a constant that determines the speed of the wave c=fw.
The wavelength decreased and the frequency increased.
When wavelength decreases, frequency increases, and when wavelength increases, frequency decreases. The product of (wavelength) times (frequency) is always the same number ... the speed of the wave. So when one of them changes, the other one must change in the opposite direction in order for their product to remain unchanged.
If the speed increased and the wavelngth stayed the same then the frequency would have to increase. Because Speed=Frequency*Wavelength Hope that helps
If the frequency remains constant, then the wavelength increases.