Wiki User
∙ 12y agoFrequency = 1/period = 1/10 sec = 0.1 Hz.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoThe frequency of the waves is 0.20 HZ.
That depends on what shore you're talking about, the streams that come by that shore, the earth's seismic activity and the weather. You'd have to be more specific for a numerical answer.
Divide metres by seconds. In this case, 110m/72s= 1.53 m/s.
The depth of a lake at a center point is a function of the distance of that point from shore.
1916
The frequency of the waves is 0.20 HZ.
The frequency of the wave is 0.2 Hz. You can calculate it by dividing the number of waves (6) by the time it took for them to reach the shore (30 seconds).
The frequency of the waves would be 0.125 Hz, calculated by taking the reciprocal of the time period (1/8 seconds). This means that there are 0.125 waves passing a point in one second.
-- If the ocean waves lap the shore every 15 seconds then their frequency is 1/15 Hz.-- If the waves come every 30 seconds then the frequency is 1/30 Hz.-- If the waves come every minute (60 seconds) then their frequency is 1/60 Hz....etc.In general, the frequency of ocean waves, and any other waves, is1/the number of seconds between consecutive waves
period = reciprocal of frequency = 1/5 = 0.2 seconds
The duration of Down the Shore is 1440.0 seconds.
The duration of Geordie Shore is 2520.0 seconds.
The duration of The Sorrowful Shore is 1020.0 seconds.
1 wave / 8 seconds = 0.125 waves per second
The duration of Ship to Shore - TV series - is 1440.0 seconds.
No, you are not a shore. A shore is an abiotic feature of an environment that lies along a coastal region that consists of rocks, sands, and dirt.
trucks.. =]