Tone is directly perportional to amplitude
Wavelength x amplitude = speed of the wave.
There is no direct relation between amplitude and period. The amplitude of a wave refers to the maximum displacement from equilibrium, while the period of a wave is the time it takes for one complete cycle to occur. They are independent properties of a wave.
The energy 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.
so...saying about acoustic waves for e.?amplitude influences loudness and frequency - pitch of tone
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: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness The frequency gives the pitch of the tone: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_%28music%29
Amplitude of a sound wave determines LOUDNESS.
The sound pressure amplitude tells about how loud the tone will be and the pitch (frequency = cycles per second) of the oscillation tells how high the sound of the tone will be. The amplidude gives the loudness of the tone. The the pitch gives the frequency of the tone.
Actually the amplitude depends on your modulator by which you generated your signal you can pick any amplitude you want but here is the formula for frequency modulated signal: Ac here decide the amplitude of the signal and you can see that it is not related to the frequency component of your signal.
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There's no dependence or connection between a wave's amplitude and its frequency.
A low tone with a medium volume.
There is no similarity. Loudness has to do with sound pressure amplitude coming from the sound source. Pitch has to do with the frequency of the tone the sound source is making. Loudness cannot be pitch.