Im unsure about what you mean. The number of things passing a point is its frequency, found by 1/time.
However you could be talking about wave velocity, then the formula is:
v = f λ
That means that the frequency increases. In that case, and assuming the speed of the wave doesn't change, the wavelength gets shorter. The general rule is:
frequency x wavelength = speed (of the wave)
speed (of the wave) = wavelength x frequencyIf you solve for wavelength, you get: wavelength = speed / frequency
Thus, assuming the speed doesn't change - usually it doesn't, or not much - then a higher frequency (which you described as "more waves passing...") implies a shorter wavelength.
With the wave speed is constant, and the number of cycles which pass a reference point increases, the frequency must increase. With higher frequency and constant speed, the wavelength decreases.
The frequency increases (assuming same speed).
If the speed of the wave remains the same then the wavelength gets shorter.
It is the frequency.
it is the number of wavelengths that pass a given point in 1 second.
To determine the number of wavelengths per second for a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz (MHz), we can use the formula: Wavelength = c/f Where: c= is the speed of light in a vacuum (approximately 3* 10^8 meters per second), f= is the frequency of the radio wave in hertz (Hz). First, we need to convert the frequency from megahertz (MHz) to hertz (Hz). Since 1 MHz = 10^6 Hz, the frequency in hertz is: f = 99.5MHz10^6 Hz/MHz = 99.510^6 Hz Now, we can calculate the wavelength: Wavelength = 310^8m/s/99.510^6 Hz Wavelength = 3/99.5 m Wavelength approx 3.02 meters So, for a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz, there are approximately 3.02 meters per wavelength. To find the number of wavelengths per second, we can use the reciprocal of the wavelength: Number of wavelengths per second = 1/Wavelength Number of wavelengths per second = 1/3.02 m Number of wavelengths per second approx 0.331 wavelengths/second Therefore, a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz has approximately 0.331 wavelengths per second.
The number of waves that pass a certain point per second is called the FREQUENCY. The unit is the hertz (cycles per second).
Frequency is measured in hertz (Hz) - cycles per second.
frequency
It is the frequency.
7 hertz. Since frequency of the wave motion is defined as the number of waves ie number of wavelengths crossing a particular point in the medium in one second.
it is the number of wavelengths that pass a given point in 1 second.
the number of waves per second (APEX)
Greater. The second number after decimal is greater so number is greater.
Subtract one number from the other. If the answer is a positive number then the first number is greater than the second number. If the answer is a negative number then the second number is greater than the first number. 9.5 - 4.6 = 4.9 (a positive number so 9.5 is greater than 4.6)
To determine the number of wavelengths per second for a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz (MHz), we can use the formula: Wavelength = c/f Where: c= is the speed of light in a vacuum (approximately 3* 10^8 meters per second), f= is the frequency of the radio wave in hertz (Hz). First, we need to convert the frequency from megahertz (MHz) to hertz (Hz). Since 1 MHz = 10^6 Hz, the frequency in hertz is: f = 99.5MHz10^6 Hz/MHz = 99.510^6 Hz Now, we can calculate the wavelength: Wavelength = 310^8m/s/99.510^6 Hz Wavelength = 3/99.5 m Wavelength approx 3.02 meters So, for a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz, there are approximately 3.02 meters per wavelength. To find the number of wavelengths per second, we can use the reciprocal of the wavelength: Number of wavelengths per second = 1/Wavelength Number of wavelengths per second = 1/3.02 m Number of wavelengths per second approx 0.331 wavelengths/second Therefore, a radio frequency on the FM band of 99.5 megahertz has approximately 0.331 wavelengths per second.
of course 4.8 is greater . Here is a simole trick for you 4.8 -2.3 =2.5 if the result is bigger than zero then the first number is greater else the second one is greater (2.3-4.8)=-2.5 this means the second number is greater.
The number of waves that pass a certain point per second is called the FREQUENCY. The unit is the hertz (cycles per second).
No, 0.14 is greater. With decimals, you look at the number to the most left (but on the right of the decimal). The first number, for both, is '1', so that doesn't tell you anything. For 0.128, the second number is '2', but for 0.14, the second number is '4'. 4 is greater than 2, which makes 0.14 greater.
6.03 is greater than 6.00, as long as you did not round off the 6.0 number. since all the numbers before the 3 are the same, and the number 3 is greater than the number 0 in second decimal place