As hard as we try to ignore it, we can't shake the nagging feeling that there must
have been some kind of a picture or a drawing that went along with this question
in the book. Without the opportunity to study that drawing, we're powerless to
make any progress toward an answer.
Frequency: Frequency is also equal to the wavelength divided by the velocity and is designated as the number of cycles (or peaks) per second. Amplitude: Amplitude is the absolute value of the magnitude of the displacement of a wave from a mean value and is designated as mV
You know its speed in vacuum, and frequency = (speed) / (wavelength) .
The wavelength is the length (distance) between two adjacent crests (or troughs, or any other part of the wave which starts repeating).
By examining a standing wave you can observe the frequency, wavelength, wave speed, and amplitude of the wave.
frequency,wavelength,amplitude,sound pressure,sound intensity,speed of sound,and direction
The frequency and wavelength are the same thing. Not effected by the amplitude in the least.
Amplitude doesn't depend on frequency or wavelength, so even if you know them, you have no way to calculate amplitude.
The frequency and wavelength are the same thing. Not effected by the amplitude in the least. (Velocity= frequency x wavelength).
Frequency and amplitude are not related. Frequency and wavelength are related. The are the inverse of one another.
The wavelength and frequency of any wave are inversely proportional. Neither of them is related to the wave's amplitude in any way.
-- Frequency and wavelength of a wave are inversely proportional. So knowing one of them determines what the other one must be. -- Amplitude has no relationship to frequency or wavelength, and no effect on them.
wavelength, frequency, and amplitude
No. Wave speed depends on frequency and wavelength, not amplitude.
Amplitude, speed, and wavelength or frequency. (Wavelength and frequency are related by the wave's speed.)
Wavelength, amplitude and frequency.
wavelength, amplitude, and frequency
Speed, amplitude, and wavelength/frequency.