There's no relationship between the frequency and the medium.
The frequency of a wave is determined by the source. Once the wave leaves
the source and sets out on its journey, the frequency doesn't change, regardless
of what kind of stuff the wave encounters and has to travel through.
For a particular type of wave, in a specified medium, the multiple of the two is a constant.
Speed = frequency x wavelength.
That depends, what wave you are talking about. The general relationship is: speed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelength. Solving for frequency: frequency = speed / wavelength If you are talking about an electromagnetic wave in a vacuum, the speed is about 300,000,000 meters/second. Other waves, however, can have quite different speeds.
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
Both the wavelength and the frequency of a wave affect the speed of a wave.
For a particular type of wave, in a specified medium, the multiple of the two is a constant.
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 wavelength is equal to the speed divided by the frequency.
velocity of a wave equals wave frequency times wave length.
speed = frequency x wavelength
speed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelengthspeed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelengthspeed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelengthspeed (of the wave) = frequency x wavelength
Wave speed = (Wavelength) times (frequency).
Speed of the wave = frequency x wavelength
the higher the frequency, the higher the energy
speed = frequency x wavelength
(frequency) multiplied by (wavelength) = (wave speed)
Wave speed c= frequency f times wavelength w or c=fw.