Time of period=1/frequency
For any wave, frequency x wavelength = speed of the wave.
Time period and frequency are mutual reciprocals. T = 1/f F = 1/t
In the case of electromagnetic wave, the energy of a photon is directly proportional to the frequency. For other types of waves, the situation may be different.
Speed = frequency x wavelengthThis is true for all waves, sound waves as well as electromagnetic waves.
A period is a particular length of time, an hour, one week, ten years, four days, etc. Frequency is how often something occurs
the relation between frequency and time period is ''t=1/f''
Frequency = 1 / period
frequency = speed of light/wavelength
voltage and frequency both are different quantity.. don't mix it...
the lower the frequency the lower the pitch; higher pitch lower frequency
yes!
There is no factual relation between these, but there is a common rule known as the Nyquist-Shannon theorem, that states that to reproduce a waveform with only reasonably errors, the sampling frequency must be at least twice the wave frequency.
There is no such equation. The main reason is that there is no relationship between current and frequency.
For any wave, frequency x wavelength = speed of the wave.
The relation between cut off frequency (fc) and band width is as follows: fc=Q*B.W where Q=(fL*fH)^1/2/(fH-fL) Q is quality factor. fL is low frequency. fH is high frequency.
Use the relation: speed = frequency x wavelengthUse the relation: speed = frequency x wavelengthUse the relation: speed = frequency x wavelengthUse the relation: speed = frequency x wavelength
Speed = (frequency) times (wavelength) Frequency = (speed) divided by (wavelength) Wavelength = (speed) divided by (frequency)