I assume that a "solar signal" means light.
Light moves at approximately 262 million meters per second in water, regardless of the frequency or wavelength of the light.
Also, if light has a frequency of 1000 Hz, then it has a wavelength of 300 kilometers. The speed of light, c, is equal to the product of the frequency and the wavelength. In other words, c=f*w
Wavelength= 10 mm. Frequency= 5.0 hertz. Speed= 50 mm/second (wavelength x frequency)
1 pulse every 40 microseconds is equal to a frequency of 25,000 hertz
The equation to use in this case is:speed (of the wave) = wavelength x frequency If the frequency is in hertz, and the wavelength is in meters, the speed will be in meters/second.
Hz (Hertz)is unit of Frequency where Wavelength is measured in metres (for eg. XRays have wavelength around 10X109m).92.7 without unit is a number only.
Wavelength is speed, of light, in this case, divided by frequency. 3 x 108 meters per second divided by 6.82 x 1014 Hertz is 0.4 micrometers.
Wavelength= 10 mm. Frequency= 5.0 hertz. Speed= 50 mm/second (wavelength x frequency)
220 hertz is faster, because the higher the frequency, the lower the wavelength. The wavelength directly correlates to the speed so therefore the object moving at 220 hertz is significantly faster. Not quite. The question is not about moving objects but wave speeds. The formula is velocity = frequency x wavelength, but for any given wave motion through a given medium, its velocity stays constant. Therefore the wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency alone. So a 220Hz signal travels at the same speed as the 440Hz signal, in the same medium.
The frequency of a radio wave in Hertz (cycles per second) multiplied by the wavelength of the radio signal (in meters) is always equal to the speed of light, which is equal to The speed of light has the symbol "c". So Frequency/c = wavelength, and wavelength/c = frequency. == ==
Just divide the speed of light (in meters/second) by the frequency (in hertz) - that will give you the wavelength (in meters). You can then convert that to nm.
1 pulse every 40 microseconds is equal to a frequency of 25,000 hertz
No; hertz is frequency.Frequency times wavelength equals speed of travel.
The frequency is 1/5 = 0.2 Hertz. The wavelength is irrelevant in this question.
The equation to use in this case is:speed (of the wave) = wavelength x frequency If the frequency is in hertz, and the wavelength is in meters, the speed will be in meters/second.
Just divide the speed of light (300 million meters/second) by the frequency, remembering that MHz means "millions of hertz".
Just multiply the wavelength (in meters) with the frequency (in Hertz) to get the speed (in m/s).
Hz (Hertz)is unit of Frequency where Wavelength is measured in metres (for eg. XRays have wavelength around 10X109m).92.7 without unit is a number only.
Wavelength = speed/frequency = 30/10 = 3 meters