The velocity would be determined by the kind of wave. Sound or electromagnetic. Not by its frequency or wavelength.
Velocity=frequency*wavelength 6*2=12ms-1
Just multiply the frequency by the wavelength. In this case, the product will be in meters per second.
you need to specify the units for velocity. assuming that the velocity is in metres per second, the wavelength is 2 metres
velocity=wavelength*frequency. You do the math
For an electromagnetic wave the velocity of the wave is 300Mm/s.
Velocity=frequency*wavelength 6*2=12ms-1
Just multiply the frequency by the wavelength. In this case, the product will be in meters per second.
you need to specify the units for velocity. assuming that the velocity is in metres per second, the wavelength is 2 metres
Speed = (wavelength) x (frequency) = (2 x 6) = 12 meters per second.That's the wave's speed. "Velocity" is something different, not just a wordto use when you mean "speed" but you want to sound more technical.
1)velocity 2)wavelength 3)frequency
Wavelength = speed/frequency = 120/6,000 = 2 centimeters
velocity=wavelength*frequency. You do the math
For an electromagnetic wave the velocity of the wave is 300Mm/s.
Frequency = Velocity divided by wavelength. So if frequency is doubled that means velocity is doubled but the wavelength is halved. You can see this by keeping wavelength a constant : If Frequency =1 and Wavelength= 1 1= Velocity/1 Velocity=1 If Frequency =2 and Wavelength= 1 2= Velocity/1 Velocity =2 OR keeping Velocity constant: If Frequency =1 and Velocity= 1 1= 1/Wavelength Wavelength =1 If Frequency =2 and Velocity= 1 2= 1/Wavelength Wavelength=1/2
By the v=f'lambda' formula (v= velocity; f= frequency; lambda= wavelength) it's 20m/s.
Wavelength x frequency = velocity, so if the frequency is the same for two waves moving at different velocities, the faster wave must have a longer wavelength.
Speed = (frequency) x (wavelength) = (2) x (2) = 4 meters per second.There's not enough information to calculate 'velocity'.