Asked by Judy

I know that...

wavelength = velocity * frequency
frequency = velocity/wavelength

If I have the voltage and the wavelength, does the voltage count as the velocity to find the frequency? If not, how do I find the frequency when I know the intensity, wavelength, and voltage?

Thanks!

Answers

Answered by bobpursley
The first equation is wrong.

wavelength=velocity/frequency.

No, voltage is not velocity.

frequency is gain, velocity/wavelength. Is there some reason you do not thing the velocity is the speed of light?
Answered by Judy
I'm doing a lab report on the photoelectric effect. I forgot about the velocity of light! I guess I can assume the values of the experiment in a vacuum, hehehe. Thanks! :) That makes it sooo much easier...
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