I don't know what's "water length" but I do know that the deeper the water are, the faster the wave goes.
If you meant wave length and not water length, then the longer the wavelength, the smaller the frequency of the wave.
velocity = frequency x wavelength
Frequency of the a wave equals its velocity divided by its wavelength.
The frequency of a wave is not directly related to the wave length. A low frequency wave or a high frequency wave may be either long-wave or short-wave.
Frequency is inversely proportional to the wave length, thus saying the shorter the wave length the higher the frequency and vice versa.The frequency is the number of waves within a time period. As the frequency within that time period increases, the number of waves increases, therefore the width of each wave (wavelength) within that time period has to decrease. Therefore:As the wave length increases, the frequency decreasesAs the wave length decreases, the frequency increases
Frequency and wavelength of a wave are inversely related: as frequency increases, wavelength decreases, and vice versa. This relationship is described by the wave equation: speed = frequency x wavelength. In other words, for a given wave speed, if frequency increases, wavelength must decrease to maintain the same speed.
Wavelength and frequency must be inversely proportional, because their product is always the same number . . . the wave speed.
Yes, high frequency waves have shorter wavelengths. This is because frequency and wavelength are inversely related in a wave, meaning that as frequency increases, wavelength decreases.
velocity of a wave equals wave frequency times wave length.
The frequency of a wave is inversely related to its time period. Frequency is the number of wave cycles that pass a certain point in a given time (usually measured in cycles per second or Hertz), while time period is the duration of one cycle of the wave. Mathematically, they are related by the equation: frequency = 1 / time period.
The wavelength and frequency of a wave are inversely related when the wave is moving at a constant speed. This means that as the wavelength increases, the frequency decreases, and vice versa. This relationship is described by the equation: speed = frequency x wavelength.
wave length and frequency are the product of the wave speed, so the wave speed is a constant variable and the other two are inversely proportional the wave length increases, as the frequency decreases
The cork will move up and down with the passing wave, but it will still remain on the surface. The cork's vibrational frequency can be related to the water wave's frequency if the wave causes the cork to vibrate at a similar rate as the wave passing by. This phenomenon is known as resonance, where the cork absorbs energy from the passing wave, causing it to vibrate at the same frequency.