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
frequency
We perceive the loudness of a sound wave as a consequence of its amplitude. The frequency of a sound wave determines the pitch we perceive.
zoe
The rate at which the sound source is vibrating :) --> novanet answer
I think the answer you seek is frequency. A low pitch equals a low frequency of the sound wave.
The pitch of a sound can be determined by its frequencyalone.
No. Frequency is related to pitch, and amplitude is related to volume.
Kind of. The pitch of a sound wave is its frequency, and because frequency = 1 / wavelength its pitch is related to the wave length. So to answer, no, the pitch of sound is not the wavelength itself, rather it is the inverse of the wavelength ( 1/wavelength)falseACJM
Pitch
Pitch
The frequency
No, pitch is related to wave frequency, loudness is related to wave amplitude.
A sound wave's pitch is determined by its frequency; that is its cycles per unit of time. The sound wave's intensity or volume is determined by its amplitude; the maximum crest of a sound wave.
increase the freguency of the wave
That's the wave's frequency.
The faster the wave speed, the higher the pitch of the sound will be. 20 vibrations is the lowest amount of vibrations needed per second for a human to be able to hear it
No. A sound's pitch depends on the frequency of the wave.
Timbre of the sound. It is related to the frequency of the fundamental frequency and a combination of overtones.