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No. The product of (wavelength) times (frequency) of an electromagnetic wave is always the same number ... the speed of the wave. So if one of those quantities increases, then the other one must decrease by the same factor, in order for the product to remain constant.
Because the product of (frequency times wavelength) is always the same number ... it's the speed of the wave. So if one of them changes, the other one has to change in the opposite direction, in order for the product to remain the same number.
When wavelength decreases, frequency increases, and when wavelength increases, frequency decreases. The product of (wavelength) times (frequency) is always the same number ... the speed of the wave. So when one of them changes, the other one must change in the opposite direction in order for their product to remain unchanged.
Because the product of (frequency times wavelength) is always the same number ... it's the speed of the wave. So if one of them changes, the other one has to change in the opposite direction, in order for the product to remain the same number.
No. All wavelengths of light, and all other forms of electromagnetic waves too, all travelat the same speed, just as long as they remain traveling through the same stuff.
The speed of a wave doesn't depend on its frequency.REASON:According to the formulaV=frequency * Lambdaso,V/ Lambda= frequencyHere,Frequency is inversely proportional to the wavelength. so, If we increase the value of frequency then by same amount frequency will decrease and will cancel out the effect of each other the "V" will remain constant.
Because the product of (frequency times wavelength) is always the same number ... it's the speed of the wave. So if one of them changes, the other one has to change in the opposite direction, in order for the product to remain the same number.
The product of (wavelength) times (frequency) is always the same number ... the speed of the wave. So if either of them changes, the other one changes by exactly the same factor in the other direction, in order for the product to remain coinstant.
Yes definitely it is elastic since initial photon does not return with the same frequency or wavelength.
More energy would be transferred in the wave, so a sound wave would get louder and a light wave would get brighter. The wavespeed, frequency, and wavelength of the wave will remain the same.
Their product is constant. So if either one is increased, the other one must decrease by the same factor.
Mick Thomson, if were talking about the same person, is the lead guitarist from Slipknot