Other Definitions
wavelength (dict)

Wavelength

The wavelength is the distance between repeating units of a wave pattern. It is commonly designated by the Greek letter lambda (λ). In a sine wave, the wavelength is the distance between peaks:
   
The x axis represents distance, and I would be some varying quantity (for instance air pressure for a sound wave or strength of the electric or magnetic field for light), at a given point in time as a function of x. Wavelength λ has an inverse relationship to frequency f, the number of peaks to pass a point in a given time. The wavelength is equal to the speed of the wave divided by the frequency of the wave. When dealing with electromagnetic radiation in a vacuum, this speed is the speed of light c, for signals (waves) in air, this is the speed of sound in air. The relationship is given by:
\lambda = \frac{c}{f} where:
λ = wavelength of a sound wave or electromagnetic wave
c = speed of light in vacuum = 299,792.458 km/s ~ 300 000 km/s = 300,000,000 m/s or
c = speed of sound in air = 343 m/s at 20 C (68 F)
f = frequency of the wave
For radio waves this relationship is approximated with the formula: wavelength (in metres) = 300 / frequency (in megahertz). When light waves (and other electromagnetic waves) enter a medium, their wavelength is reduced by a factor equal to the refractive index n of the but the frequency of the wave is unchanged. The wavelength of the wave in the medium, λ' is given by:
\lambda^\prime = \frac{\lambda_0}{n} where:
λ0 is the vacuum wavelength of the wave
Wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, no matter what medium they are travelling through, are usually quoted in terms of the vacuum wavelength, although this is not always explicitly stated. Louis-Victor de Broglie discovered that all particles with momentum have a wavelength associated with their quantum mechanical wavefunction, called the de Broglie wavelength. For a relativistic particle, this wavelength is given by
\lambda = \frac{h}{p} = \frac {h} \sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}} where:
h is Planck's constant
p is the particle's momentum
m is the particle's mass
v is the particle's velocity
The greater the energy, the larger the frequency and the shorter (smaller) the wavelength. Given the relationship between wavelength and frequency, it follows that short wavelengths are more energetic than long wavelengths.

See Also

External link


 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
white house
warren g. harding
whist
william withering
white elephant
battle of monte cassino
double cross system
codename garbo
codename zig zag
tricycle (world war ii)
battle of kursk
wargaming
washington
canellales
wearable computer
wilhelm von humboldt
world war i casualties
world war i reparations
world series of poker
william barnes
woodworking
william gibson (novelist)
web crawler
wings of desire
wireless valley
wild strawberries (movie)
wachowski brothers
wisconsin
summerfest
werner heisenberg
wireless telegraphy
william shockley
walter brattain
world music
wu tang clan
werner herzog
world wide web
wwf
wireless lan
wireless personal area network
world wide web consortium
whisky
war
ward cunningham