Is this Wavelength answer correct?

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The calculation for the wavelength of a 1.5 MHz sound wave in soft tissue uses the formula wavelength = velocity divided by frequency, resulting in 10.27 x 10^-4 m. This converts to 1.027 mm, which is longer than typical ultrasound wavelengths, usually less than 1 mm. The initial conversion to mm was incorrect, as 10.27 mm is not accurate for this frequency. The correct conversion emphasizes the importance of precise decimal placement in calculations. Understanding these conversions is crucial in ultrasound physics.
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The question is: Calculate the wavelength of a 1.5 MHz sound wave that is being transmitted through soft tissue. (This is Ultrasound physics, if you are wondering.)
formula used: wavelength = velocity (1540 m/s) divided by 1.5 MHz

MHz changes to 1.5 x 10^6

so I have: 1540m/s / 1.5 x 10^6 1/s=10.27 x 10^-4m or 10.27mm


Is this correct? I'm worried about my conversion---I tend to mess up the most simple conversions.

Thx!

Kathy
 
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10.27 x 10-4m is correct, however it is not 10.27 mm (which is ~0.4 inch).

Ultrasound has short wavelengths, usually < 1 mm.

So 1 mm is 10-3 m.

10.27 x 10-4m = 1.027 x 10-3m = 1.027 mm, which is long for UT.
 
Thank you! Those darned old decimals get me every time!
 
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