When frequency is high, the speed typically remains constant. This is because the speed of a wave is determined by the medium through which it is traveling, not by the frequency of the wave.
When the wheel speed increases, the frequency also increases. This is because frequency is directly proportional to the speed of rotation of the wheel.
The wavelength of a wave with low speed but high frequency would be short.
If the amplitude of a wave is doubled while the frequency remains constant, the speed of the wave will not change. The speed of a wave is determined by the medium through which it is traveling, not by its amplitude or frequency.
If the frequency decreases and the wavelength increases, the speed of the wave remains constant. This is because the speed of a wave is determined by the medium it's traveling through, not by its frequency or wavelength.
If the speed of a wave remains the same while the wavelength stays constant, the frequency also remains unchanged. This is because the relationship between the speed, wavelength, and frequency of a wave is given by the equation speed = frequency x wavelength. So, if two of these values are constant, the third one will be constant as well.
When the wheel speed increases, the frequency also increases. This is because frequency is directly proportional to the speed of rotation of the wheel.
The speed changes.
The wavelength of a wave with low speed but high frequency would be short.
The speed halves.
Speed = wavelength x frequency, so wavelength = speed / frequency. Therefore, the wavelength is inversely proportional to the frequency. Double the frequency means half the wavelength.
If the frequency remains constant, then the wavelength increases.
Remember that wavelength x frequency = speed of the wave.If you increase the wavelength, the frequency will decrease - since the speed of most waves is more or less independent of the frequency or wavelength.
If the amplitude of a wave is doubled while the frequency remains constant, the speed of the wave will not change. The speed of a wave is determined by the medium through which it is traveling, not by its amplitude or frequency.
Nothing happens
If the frequency decreases and the wavelength increases, the speed of the wave remains constant. This is because the speed of a wave is determined by the medium it's traveling through, not by its frequency or wavelength.
If the speed of a wave remains the same while the wavelength stays constant, the frequency also remains unchanged. This is because the relationship between the speed, wavelength, and frequency of a wave is given by the equation speed = frequency x wavelength. So, if two of these values are constant, the third one will be constant as well.
Wavelength = 1/frequency. If you double the frequency, the wavelength drops to half.