frequency = (wave speed)/(wavelength)
frequency = 1/(period)
velocity = frequency / wavelength, I believe.
The formula for a wave in this case is: speed = frequency x wavelength. Since Hz = 1/second, the answer will be in meter/second.
One commonly used formula for waves is: speed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelength If you know any two of these pieces of information, you can calculate the third one.
frequency = wave speed / wavelengthWave length equals phase speed divided by frequency. So let L be length, S be speed and F be frequency. We usually use letters such as lamda, but L will work.L=S/F so FL=S and F=S/L. The frequency is the phase speed divided by the wave length.If it is an electromagnetic wave in a vacuum, then velocity is approximately 3 x 108 meters/second
Period = 1 / frequency
1/frequency of wave
The wavelength of a wave is calculated using the formula: Wavelength = speed of the wave divided by the frequency of the wave. For radio waves and other wireless signals as well as the speed a signal travels along a wire, the speed of the wave is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second (the speed of light).
Wavelength = velocity / frequency
velocity = frequency / wavelength, I believe.
I am pretty sure that there are many formulae for working with waves. It also depends what type of waves you are working with. One important formula, that applies to all sorts of waves, is this simple relationship: speed (of the wave) = wavelength x frequency
The formula for a wave in this case is: speed = frequency x wavelength. Since Hz = 1/second, the answer will be in meter/second.
-- Speed of a wave = (frequency) times (wavelength) -- There is no general formula for amplitude.
There are a few different formulas, depending on what measurements you know. For mechanical waves . . . the mechanical characteristics of the medium. For electromagnetic waves . . . the electrical characteristics of the medium. For all waves . . . the product of (wavelength) multiplied by (frequency).
That also depends on the speed of the wave. Use the formula speed = wavelength x frequency, or wavelength = speed / frequency. In the case of an electromagnetic wave in a vacuum, use 300,000,000 m/s for the speed.
The speed is the product of wavelength and frequency.
Use the formula v=fλv=Speed of the wave (Light travels about 3x10^8 m/s)λ=wave length (distance from one peak to the next)so by rearranging the formula to v/λ =frequency, you can work out the frequency of the wave by using the distance between peaks (as the wavelength) divided by the speed of the wave.Hope this helps
speed = wavelength x frequency