We would call any wave longer than 1 millimeter a "radio wave".
Radio waves can penetrate materials such as walls, buildings, and certain types of soil more effectively than light waves. This is due to their longer wavelengths, which allow them to pass through obstacles that scatter or absorb visible light. For example, radio waves can travel through concrete and wood, while light waves are typically reflected or absorbed by these materials.
100 meters and longer would be 3mhz and lower. Divide the speed of light ( C=3.0*10^8 meters per second) by the wavelength. You get frequency.
When you pluck the wire Longitudinal waves are produced.
for wavelength, the longer of the two is visible light, but the longest type of rays are radio waves (some of them have a wavelength as long as a football field)
Waves of extremely short wavelength produced as a result of transitions of electrons in an atom.
Radio waves have the longest wavelengths.
long wavelengths and low frequency...? Not sure what kind of answer you're looking for here.
"Visible" light is the only kind of electromagneticenergy waves you can see. But it's notthe only kind of energy wave you can see.You can certainly see ocean waves in the water, seismic waves in the land, standing waveson a guitar string, and traveling waves running up and down a long guy-wire.
Electromagnetic waves between 700 and 400 billionths of a meter are in the visible light spectrum. They have wavelengths ranging from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers, encompassing the colors of the rainbow.
Ultraviolet rays given off by the sun are a form of electromagnetic wave. They have shorter wavelengths and higher energy than visible light.
The ones we call "radio waves". That's the electromagnetic spectrum between maybe roughly speaking 10 KHz to 300 GHz., or wavelengths between 1 mm to 30 km.
The symbol for wavelength is the lower case Greek letter lambda - which looks like an upside-down y. The unit of measurement depends on the kind of wave: electromagnetic waves, for example, have wavelengths ranging from 10^-11 metres (10 picometres) to 1 kilometre. Other waves can have even longer wavelengths.
The ones we call "radio waves". That's the electromagnetic spectrum between maybe roughly speaking 10 KHz to 300 GHz., or wavelengths between 1 mm to 30 km.
Light wave is an electromagnetic wave, so light waves are a kind of wave. I don't understand what you mean by what waves have the most light waves. It's not possible to emit a combination of different kinds of waves (such mechanical, EM wave, sound wave) from a single source.
Radio waves can penetrate materials such as walls, buildings, and certain types of soil more effectively than light waves. This is due to their longer wavelengths, which allow them to pass through obstacles that scatter or absorb visible light. For example, radio waves can travel through concrete and wood, while light waves are typically reflected or absorbed by these materials.
Wavelengths
They are transverse waves.