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There is no relationship. You can have a large or small amplitude combined with a high or low pitch.
Time of period=1/frequency
The vertical distance between the peak and trough is 2*Amplitude.
There is none. The frequency and time are reciprocals of one another. That is a time period of 1/1000th of a second is a frequency of 1000 hertz.
Thgere's no correlation whatsoever between amplitude and wavelength.
Tone is directly perportional to amplitude
Wavelength x amplitude = speed of the wave.
It messes up the math. For large amplitude swings, the simple relation that the period of a pendulum is directly proportional to the square root of the length of the pendulum (only, assuming constant gravity) no longer holds. Specifically, the period increases with increasing amplitude.
There is no relationship. You can have a large or small amplitude combined with a high or low pitch.
the relation between frequency and time period is ''t=1/f''
Frequency = 1 / period
The period is independent of the mass.
Actually the amplitude depends on your modulator by which you generated your signal you can pick any amplitude you want but here is the formula for frequency modulated signal: Ac here decide the amplitude of the signal and you can see that it is not related to the frequency component of your signal.
amplitude =7. to find the period, set 2x equal to 2∏. then x=∏=period
Time of period=1/frequency
No. If compared to ocean waves, amplitude would be wave height, and period would be how long to next wave.
Amplitude = 5 Period = pi/4 radians (= 45 degrees).