Divided the wave's speed by its wavelength.
The period is the reciprocal of the frequency, in other words, one divide by the frequency. If the frequency is in Hertz, the period is in seconds.
2m*0.3Hz=0.6m/s
The speed of a wave doesn't depend on its frequency.
.05 seconds
The frequency is 1000000000 Hz.
Wavelength = (speed of the wave) divided by (frequency)
You need to know it speed, wavelenght and its frequency.
you divide!
Wavelength = (wave speed) divided by (frequency)
The speed of the wave is equal to wavelength x frequency. You can calculate the frequency, in this case, as 1 / period.
Momentum, energy, frequency, and wave number (but not wave vector.)
No. Amplitude and frequency of a wave are not related.Either one can change with no effect on the other one.
Frequency (f)=Speed of the wave(v)/wavelength l
you find out a waves speed by taking the wavelength and divide it by it's wave period or how long it takes for the wave to complete a full wavelength. This is what my textbook said. Speed=Wavelength ×Frequency
Wave speed = (wavelength) x (frequency) "Depth" (?) is not involved.
The period is the reciprocal of the frequency, in other words, one divide by the frequency. If the frequency is in Hertz, the period is in seconds.
The speed of a wave = (frequency) x (wavelength) = 2.5 meters per second.