It is False.
False. The wavelength of a wave is measured from crest to crest or trough to trough, representing the distance between two corresponding points on a wave cycle.
Usually it is shown in diagrams as from where the variable passes across the zero line, but your way will give the same result. It is the length of one complete cycle that matters.
False. Constructive interference occurs when the crest of one wave meets up with the crest of a second wave, or when the trough of one wave meets up with the trough of a second wave. This results in a wave with greater amplitude.
False. Heat is measured in units of energy such as calories or joules, not in degrees Celsius. Temperature, on the other hand, is measured in degrees Celsius.
False. A graduated cylinder is used to measure volume, not mass. Mass is typically measured using a balance scale or other weight measuring devices.
False, it is measured from crest to crest.
False. The wavelength of a wave is measured from crest to crest or trough to trough, representing the distance between two corresponding points on a wave cycle.
No, you have to measure a complete cycle, for example, from crest to crest.
Usually it is shown in diagrams as from where the variable passes across the zero line, but your way will give the same result. It is the length of one complete cycle that matters.
Wave length is actually measured from the peak of one wave to the peak of the next wave. It represents the distance a wave travels in one complete cycle. The distance from the crest to trough is known as the amplitude.
False. Constructive interference occurs when the crest of one wave meets up with the crest of a second wave, or when the trough of one wave meets up with the trough of a second wave. This results in a wave with greater amplitude.
false
false
false
Measuring a wave from crest to trough in the verticaldirection will give the amplitude of the wave. It's called the peak to peak value (as it is is a measure of the distance from the positive peak to the negative peak -- the crest and trough). Measuring the wave in the horizontal direction from a crest to a trough will result in half a wavelength.Picture a water wave frozen on the surface of a pond. The distance (verticaly) from the bottom of a trough to the top of a crest is the amplitude of that wave. A measure of the distance (horizontally) from the bottom of a trough to the top of a crest is half the wavelength of the wave. (Note that athe use of "bottom of a trough" and "top of a crest" might seem redundant or even nonsensical, but is applied here in the hopes of clarity.)
That's the wavelength. Isn't it?
Volume - measured in cubic meters, cubic centimeters, etc.APEX height, length, and width