At 0°C sound travels through air at a speed of 330 m/s. If a sound wave is produced with a wavelength of 0.90 m, what is the wave’s frequency?

To find the wave's frequency, we can use the formula:

Speed = Wavelength × Frequency

Given that the speed of sound is 330 m/s and the wavelength is 0.90 m, we can rearrange the formula to solve for frequency:

Frequency = Speed / Wavelength

Substituting the given values into the equation, we get:

Frequency = 330 m/s / 0.90 m

Simplifying the equation, we find:

Frequency = 366.67 Hz

Therefore, the wave's frequency is approximately 366.67 Hz.

To find the wave's frequency, you can use the formula:

frequency = speed / wavelength

where:
- frequency is the number of complete waves that pass a point in a given time (measured in Hertz, Hz),
- speed is the rate at which the wave travels through the medium (in meters per second, m/s), and
- wavelength is the distance between two corresponding points on a wave (in meters, m).

Given that sound travels through air at a speed of 330 m/s and the wavelength is 0.90 m, we can substitute these values into the formula:

frequency = 330 m/s / 0.90 m

Simplifying this equation, we get:

frequency = 366.67 Hz

Therefore, the wave's frequency is approximately 366.67 Hz.

The wave equation is nice.

frequency*wavelength= speed of wave.

solve for frequency.
MEMORIZE that equation.