center
Center
line spacing
One lap
The greatest distance between the rest position of a wave and its crest is called the amplitude. Amplitude measures the maximum displacement of a wave from its equilibrium position.
In a wave, it is called the wave length.
The distance between a wave's crest and its trough is called the amplitude. It represents the maximum displacement of the wave from its resting position.
The paragraph(s) between the introduction and conclusion are called body paragraph(s).
The amplitude is the distance between the the zero position and the crest or the zero position and the trough so the vertical distance means double the amplitude.
The direction distance between the initial and final position of a body is the magnitude of the displacement vector, which measures the straight-line distance between the two points. It indicates the shortest distance between the two positions regardless of the path taken.
The distance between a line through the middle of a wave and a crest or trough is called the amplitude. It represents half the distance between a crest and a trough, or the maximum displacement of a wave from its equilibrium position.
The distance between the crest of a wave and the rest position of the medium is called the amplitude of the wave. It represents the maximum displacement of particles in the medium from their equilibrium position when the wave passes through. The larger the amplitude, the more energy the wave carries.
The half the distance between the crest and the trough is the midpoint of the wave, known as the equilibrium position or the rest position. This is where the wave is at its average height and no displacement from the wave's position occurs.
The maximum distance a wave vibrates from its rest position is called the amplitude. It represents the peak displacement of particles in the medium from their equilibrium position as the wave passes through. The larger the amplitude, the greater the energy carried by the wave.