Velocity equals frequency times wavelength
The energy is E=hf = hc/w where f is frequency, c is the velocity and w is the wavelength.
The shorter the wavelength is, the higher the frequency will be and the longer the wavelength is, the lower the frequency will be.
electromagnetic
Velocity/wavelength=frequency
The velocity of a wave is the product of frequency and wavelength,such that: V=fλ
The energy is E=hf = hc/w where f is frequency, c is the velocity and w is the wavelength.
wavelength = velocity / frequency
The shorter the wavelength is, the higher the frequency will be and the longer the wavelength is, the lower the frequency will be.
Wavelength = (speed) divided by (frequency) Frequency = (speed) divided by (wavelength) Speed = (frequency) times (wavelength)
electromagnetic
Velocity/wavelength=frequency
The velocity of a wave is the product of frequency and wavelength,such that: V=fλ
They are inversely related. The product of these two would give the velocity of electromagnetic wave in the medium. The frequency character would never change as the wave changes from one medium to the other. But as the speed changes then definitely its wavelength would change
The question is incomplete. Frequency of what? If it refers to electromagnetic waves, you won't need even frequency to determine velocity (in a vacuum), because it will always be c (the speed of light). You can compute the speed of other kinds of waves if you know the frequency and wavelength, but not from frequency alone. The formula is frequency x wavelength = velocity If the waves are electromagnetic, and you have only frequency, you can compute the wavelength using the same formula.
Frequency = velocity / wavelengthif 'v' is the velocity, f frequency and 'lambda' is the wavelength of a wave then,f = v/ lambdaor v = f * lambda
The velocity would be determined by the kind of wave. Sound or electromagnetic. Not by its frequency or wavelength.
Wavelength = Velocity / Frequency So, Velocity = Wavelength * Frequency