amplitude
That's the 'wavelength'.
The crest.
No, the heat of a wave is measured by using, for example, a thermometer to gauge temperature. The distance from crest to crest is wavelength.
The distance from one peak to the next peak
I assume you mean, the crests of a wave. That distance is called the wavelength.
The width of the wave. The wavelength is the distance (in the direction of the wave's propagation) between the top of a wave crest to the top of the next wave crest. The wavelength is the frequency divided by the velocity of the wave. v=f/l l=f/v
The lowest point of a wave is known as the trough
The distance from the rest point to the top is called the amplitude. The top of the wave is called a crest and the bottom of a wave is called a trough.
That is the mean amplitude of the wave.
The top part of a wave is the crest; the bottom is the trough.
Crest.
The vertical distance between trough and crest is called the height of the wave. While the crest is the highest point of a wave, the trough is the lowest point.Are you talking about waves? That simply depends on the frequency of the wave; crest and trough are just terms given to sections of waves. The crest is the top of the wave, and the trough is the bottom.It's the amplitude. Like on the drawn parts of a transverse wave. You can look it up on google images.wave hight