For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.
For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.
For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.
For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.
The frequency with the shortest wavelength would be 100 GHz. Wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency, meaning higher frequencies have shorter wavelengths. So, 100 GHz would have a shorter wavelength compared to 1 GHz, 100 MHz, and 10 MHz.
100MHz Wavelength(m) is inversely proportional to frequency (Hz) Use the equation λ=v/f (Wavelength=velocity/frequency) For the velocity just use the value 1 as since both waves will be through the same medium it doesn't matter 0.000001m = 1ms-1 / 10,000,000Hz 0.0000001m = 1ms-1 / 100,000,000Hz
This would mean the operating frequency, in hertz or megahertz of the chips in the random access memory. Common values are between 100mHz and 800mHz. Newer computers generally have memory frequencies of 400mHz or more.
10 nanoseconds
a channel is actually a path through which a signal of a particular frequency travels and bandwidth is the capacity of that path it tells about the number or range of frequencies which a path can carry
All of our cables meet or exceed the TIA standard rating. The TIA rating for Cat5e is 100MHz.
100mhz
which processor fist broke the 10oMHz
1000Mhz is equivalent to 1Ghz. Therefore 100Mhz is equivilent to 0.1Ghz
The length of a wave is denoted by its wavelength, which is found by dividing the speed of light, or c, (3 x 108 m/s) by the frequency (88 x 106 Hz). The answer is 3.4 meters.
The question is not formed well enough to answer it. The bandwidth of a medium is a frequency interval in which the medium is able to transmit information. So first we need a few more questions before we can answer.The medium itself doesn't HAVE a frequency. So what is 100MHz? The frequency of the carrier signal? That's what I'm betting for. That data alone tells us absolutely nothing about the bandwidth. You need at least a transmission characteristic function to determine it.The other possibility that the 100MHz is the bandwidth. In that case the bandwidth is 100MHz.
The formula for wavelength λ = v/f where v is the velocity f is the frequency of the wave and λ (lambda) is the symbol for wavelength Wavelength formulaC=λf or λ=C/f