When changing the frequency of water waves, I noticed that higher frequencies created shorter wavelengths and faster wave movement. When changing the amplitude, I observed that larger amplitudes resulted in taller waves with more energy.
Imagine this... Take a smooth pond of water. Take a small pebble and toss it into the pond. Take notice of the ripples created, both the frequency and amplitude. Now take a larger rock and toss it into the smooth pond. Take notice of the ripples it creates. The same frequency with a larger amplitude. The stronger source created larger amplitude waves. This is how two waves can have the same frequency but different amplitudes - a stronger source power.
The movement of particles in a medium, such as air or water, affects the frequency and amplitude of a wave passing through that medium. As particles move more vigorously, the amplitude of the wave increases. Similarly, as particles move faster (higher frequency), the frequency of the wave passing through the medium increases.
The four characteristics of waves that can change are wavelength, frequency, amplitude, and speed. These changes can be influenced by the medium through which the wave is traveling, such as air, water, or a solid material.
When a light wave travels from air into water, its frequency remains unchanged. This is due to the fact that the frequency of a wave is determined by the source that creates it, and does not change when it passes from one medium to another.
The change in amplitude does not affect the frequency of the wave, which is determined by factors like wind speed and water depth. However, the increase in amplitude means the wave is carrying more energy, proportional to the square of the amplitude change. This means the wave is now carrying four times the amount of energy it was before.
Imagine this... Take a smooth pond of water. Take a small pebble and toss it into the pond. Take notice of the ripples created, both the frequency and amplitude. Now take a larger rock and toss it into the smooth pond. Take notice of the ripples it creates. The same frequency with a larger amplitude. The stronger source created larger amplitude waves. This is how two waves can have the same frequency but different amplitudes - a stronger source power.
The movement of particles in a medium, such as air or water, affects the frequency and amplitude of a wave passing through that medium. As particles move more vigorously, the amplitude of the wave increases. Similarly, as particles move faster (higher frequency), the frequency of the wave passing through the medium increases.
The four characteristics of waves that can change are wavelength, frequency, amplitude, and speed. These changes can be influenced by the medium through which the wave is traveling, such as air, water, or a solid material.
When a light wave travels from air into water, its frequency remains unchanged. This is due to the fact that the frequency of a wave is determined by the source that creates it, and does not change when it passes from one medium to another.
The change in amplitude does not affect the frequency of the wave, which is determined by factors like wind speed and water depth. However, the increase in amplitude means the wave is carrying more energy, proportional to the square of the amplitude change. This means the wave is now carrying four times the amount of energy it was before.
Pitch is a characteristic decided by the frequency. So high pitch high frequency. Low frequency is the cause of low Pitch. Frequency and wavelength are always inversely related. So wavelength increases. But amplitude in no way is related to the pitch. Hence amplitude could remain the same.
Sound waves are vibrations that travel through a medium, such as air or water. They have characteristics like frequency, amplitude, and wavelength. Frequency determines pitch, amplitude determines volume, and wavelength determines the distance between wave peaks. Sound waves can be reflected, refracted, and diffracted, and they can also interfere with each other.
There are different kinds of wave, such as sound waves, electromagnetic waves, water waves etc. So the first property I would describe as the wave medium. Then you would have the additional properties of amplitude and frequency.
the amplitude of a water wave is the maximum distance a water particle moves above or below the surface level of calm water.
The amplitude of a wave is directly related to the amount of disturbance in the water. A wave with a larger amplitude represents a larger disturbance in the water, while a wave with a smaller amplitude represents a smaller disturbance.
The frequency and the amplitude are related in such a way that, the greater the amplitude the greater is the energy. The sound pressure amplitude tells about how loud the tone will be and the frequency (cycles per second) of the oscillation tells how high the sound of the tone will be. The amplitude gives the loudness of the tone: See link below The frequency gives the pitch of the tone: See link below
Changing the amplitude of a wave does not impact the wave speed. Wave speed is determined by the medium through which the wave is traveling. The amplitude only affects the energy of the wave, not its speed.