The product of both is equal to the speed of the wave.
frequency = speed of light/wavelength
Period = 1 / frequency
Pitch is frequency: the higher the pitch the higher the frequency, and vice-versa.
I'm pretty sure they're related because the period is the reciprocal of the frequency, and the frequency is the reciprocal of the period...but I'm not sure WHY yet :P hope I could hrlp
Time period = 1 / frequency. Frequency = 1 / time period.Frequency and period are mutual reciprocals.
For any wave, (wavelength) times (frequency) = (speed of propagation).For electromagnetic waves, (wavelength) times (frequency) = (speed of 'light')
frequency = speed of light/wavelength
Not really much of a similaritiy there but FREQUENCY and energy there is. the higher the frequency the greater the energy I guess it could be the same with wavelenghth though
Product of these two would be equal to the speed of light. Velocity of light in vacuum or air medium is 3 x 108 m/s If frequency is known the wavelength = 3 x 108 / frequency For example frequency = 3 M Hz = 3 x 106 Hz Then wavelength = 100 m If suppose the wavelength of light is 5 x 10-7 m then its frequency 6 x 1014 Hz
The speed of every radio wave is 186,282 miles (299,792,458 meters) per second. When you multiply the frequency times the wavelength, that's the result. If it isn't, then you made a mistake somewhere.
Frequency and amplitude are not related. Frequency and wavelength are related. The are the inverse of one another.
wavelenghth
Period = 1 / frequency
they are related by the equation velocity=frequency*wavelength
Frequency is related to pitch; volume is related to amplitude.
The velocity of a traveling wave is dependent on the composition of the conducting medium. Not directly on frequency. Though many conductive media are frequency dispersive - they conduct different frequencies at different speeds. Thus we get our rainbow. In air, sound travels about 300m/sec. But in water, about three times that velocity. And in metals, about ten times that velocity.
yes frequency = 1/radiation