How Do You Calculate Wavelength in Physics Problems?

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To calculate wavelength in physics problems, the formula used is wavelength = velocity/frequency. For the mosquito's wing flaps, the calculation of 340 m/s divided by 600 Hz yields a wavelength of approximately 0.57 meters. In the case of radio waves traveling at the speed of light (300,000,000 m/s) at a frequency of 100 MHz (100,000,000 Hz), the wavelength is calculated as 300,000,000 m/s divided by 100,000,000 Hz, resulting in a wavelength of 3 meters. It's essential to ensure all units are correctly converted to maintain accuracy in calculations. Understanding the relationship between frequency and wavelength is crucial for solving these types of physics problems.
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Hey,
I have to answer this question in Physics: A mosquito flaps its wings at 600 vibrations a second, find the wavelength...

What I thought to solve it was to take 340 meters per second divided by 600 Hz...which equals roughly .6... is that correct? If so another problem states that Radio Waves travel at the speed of light 300,000 km/s...What is the wavelength of radio waves received at 100 MHz...I thought 300000/100...maybe?

dunno

thanks
 
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based on the equation wavelength = velocity/frequency I believe you are correct for the bug. make sure your units are converted to m/s and into hz for the second problem. I can't remember the magnitude of a mega-hz so you may be correct in saying they cancel out to Meters, but I would say you are using the formula correctly
 
v=f\lambda

I think that is the equation you will need. Put the numbers you have into in, and rearrange. =]
 
Use c=f \lambda

all EM waves travel at c=3x10^8 and the prefix-M (Mega) is 10^6
 
so its 300000/1000000?
 
zachcumer said:
so its 300000/1000000?

A megaherz is 10^6 Hz, so 100 Mhz is 10^8. Better use exponential notation than
all those zero's. If you want the wavelength in meters, you have to convert the
speed of light in m/s.
 
zachcumer said:
so its 300000/1000000?


Not exactly but you are on the right lines:

300,000 km/s = 300,000,000 m/s
100MHz = 100,000,000 Hz or 100,000,000 [1/s]

[300,000,000 / 100,000,000] = [m/s]/[1/s] = [m]

So you will get a answer in metres if you divide the Speed of light in m/s with the number of hertz.
 
Thanks...so its 3 meters...thanks..
 
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