wavelength.
That is incorrect.The distance of one complete wave cycle (for example, from one wave crest to the next) is called the wave's wavelength.The number of cycles per second is called the frequency.
The wavelength of a wave refers to the distance between two crests or the distance between two troughs. The length of one complete wave cycle is called a wavelength.
No, the distance between a point on one wave and the identical point on the next wave is the wavelength, not the amplitude. Amplitude is the height of the wave.
1 wavelength in a transverse wave is equal too the distance between crest and crest or trough and trough
The distance between one crest of a wave and the next is called its wavelength.
The wavelength of a wave refers to the distance between two crests or the distance between two troughs. The length of one complete wave cycle is called a wavelength.
The distance between one point of a wave to the same point on the next wave is called the wavelength.
The distance between one crest of a wave and the next is called its wavelength.
The distance from one peak to the next peak
Wave length
wavelength
Wavelength.
The distance from one wave to the next wave is called the wavelength.
The frequency of a sine wave can be thought of in several different ways: -- watching the wave from one fixed point, the number of times the wave reaches its maximum amplitude in one second, or the number of complete waves that pass you in one second -- the speed of the wave, divided by the distance between two consecutive maximum points on it -- the reciprocal of the time it takes for one complete wave to pass you (' 1 ' divided by that length of time)
That distance is a definition, not a wave property. It's defined as the "wavelength".
That distance is a definition, not a wave property. It's defined as the "wavelength".
Wavelength is the distance between two consecutive wave crests.