Equivalently, in terms of the wave's
angular frequency ω, which specifies angular change per unit of time, and
wavenumber (or angular wave number) k, which represents the proportionality between the angular frequency ω and the linear speed (speed of propagation) ν
p,
To understand where this equation comes from, consider a basic
sine wave,
A cos (
kx−
ωt). After time t, the source has produced
ωt/2π = ft oscillations. After the same time, the initial wave front has propagated away from the source through space to the distance x to fit the same number of oscillations,
kx =
ωt.
Thus the propagation velocity
v is
v =
x/
t =
ω/
k. The wave propagates faster when higher frequency oscillations are distributed less densely in space.
[2] Formally,
Φ =
kx−
ωt is the phase. Since
ω = −d
Φ/d
t and
k = +d
Φ/d
x, the wave velocity is
v = d
x/d
t =
ω/
k.
What Wikipedia is saying is:
and Wikipedia derives
v = d
x/d
t =
ω/
k
so, what I can conclude from it is :
Numerically, speed of wave propagation(defined as wave velocity) = ω/k = phase velocity
which I had already said.
What I want to know is
Are wave velocity and phase velocity two different names for the same quantity i.e.ω/k?
Do wave velocity and phase velocity have the same meaning or they have different meanings,but their magnitudes are equal?