The amplitude of a wave is the maximum displacement from the equilibrium position. It is half the distance between the crest and trough of the wave. Can you please provide the wave you are referring to?
The amplitude of the standing wave shown is the maximum displacement of a point on the wave from its equilibrium position.
The amplitude of a sound is typically represented by the height or intensity of the sound wave. In a waveform graph, the amplitude is shown by the distance between the peaks and troughs of the wave. The greater the amplitude, the louder the sound.
A wave exhibits negative amplitude at the point where it reaches its lowest point below the equilibrium position.
The statement is incorrect. The maximum displacement of a particle from its equilibrium position in a wave is known as the amplitude of the wave, not the amplitude of the particle itself.
equilibrium amplitude
The amplitude of the standing wave shown is the maximum displacement of a point on the wave from its equilibrium position.
The amplitude of a sound is typically represented by the height or intensity of the sound wave. In a waveform graph, the amplitude is shown by the distance between the peaks and troughs of the wave. The greater the amplitude, the louder the sound.
A wave exhibits negative amplitude at the point where it reaches its lowest point below the equilibrium position.
The statement is incorrect. The maximum displacement of a particle from its equilibrium position in a wave is known as the amplitude of the wave, not the amplitude of the particle itself.
the amplitude of a water wave is the maximum distance a water particle moves above or below the surface level of calm water.
equilibrium amplitude
The characteristic measurement identified by the letter A on the diagram is the amplitude of the wave. Amplitude refers to the maximum displacement of a wave from its equilibrium position.
wellllll energy of the wave controls the amplitude of a wave
The term for maximum displacement is the amplitude of the wave.
I apologize, but I cannot see images or diagrams. However, the amplitude of a wave is typically measured as the distance from the rest position to the peak (or trough) of the wave, while the wavelength is the distance between two consecutive points that are in phase, such as from peak to peak or trough to trough. If you provide numerical values or a description, I can help interpret them!
The vertical distance from the crest of a wave to the trough is known as the amplitude of the wave. It represents how far the wave moves above and below the equilibrium position. The larger the amplitude, the greater the energy and intensity of the wave.
equilibrium amplitude