No. The amplitude of a sound is not related to its frequency (wavelength).
There might appear to be a connection if the listener's hearing is more or less sensitive to certain frequencies. For example, as a sound with constant amplitude rises in frequency toward the upper limit of the listener's hearing range, it will be perceived as if its amplitude (loudness) is dropping, although that sensation is in the ear of the beholder and not a property of the sound itself.
It is defined as its reciprocal value.
Frequ=1/(time period of one cycle)
The pitch of sound depends on the sound's frequency. Frequency is basically the amount of waves the sound is producing. If there are many waves, "happen frequently", it is a high frequency. This is a high pitch. If the distance between the waves is large, it is a low frequency and a low pitch.
An oscilloscope is the machine, but it measures frequency.... so sound waves are measured by frequency
Speed = frequency x wavelengthThis is true for all waves, sound waves as well as electromagnetic waves.
Pitch
Period = (1) divided by (frequency) = (wavelength) divided by (speed)Frequency = (1) divided by (period) = (speed) divided by (period)Speed = (wavelength) times (frequency) = (wavelength) divided by (period)Wavelength = (speed) divided by (frequency) = (speed) times (period)
In a way, yes, as the pitch of a sound wave is determined by it's frequency f, and a waves period T is the reciprocal of f. i.e. T=1/f
The pitch of sound depends on the sound's frequency. Frequency is basically the amount of waves the sound is producing. If there are many waves, "happen frequently", it is a high frequency. This is a high pitch. If the distance between the waves is large, it is a low frequency and a low pitch.
Well, the higher the frequency is the higher the pitch. They both travel with sound waves and they both have a big role in how sound travels.
Pitch is actually the perceived frequency of sound waves. It refers to how high or low a sound is, and it is directly related to the frequency of the sound waves. While it does affect how we hear and interpret sound, it is not the same as the impression of how a person hears in general.
frequency
An oscilloscope is the machine, but it measures frequency.... so sound waves are measured by frequency
sorta, compressions move at a slightly higher frequency, which is indirectly related to speed.
No, sound is a wave, all waves have a frequency. The frequency is how many waves pass by a certain point in 1 second. Sound is a longitudinal wave.
It sound of pitch
Speed = frequency x wavelengthThis is true for all waves, sound waves as well as electromagnetic waves.
Radar waves have a lower frequency that light waves.The frequency of a light wave is related to wavelength and speed by the equation c = »½. The color of a light wave is also determined by the frequency. The amplitude and brightness are not related to the frequency.
Ultrasonic sound.