Asked by ben hen

Waves have energy that causes particles in matter to vibrate. So, it stands to reason that(1 point)
Responses

the higher the energy, the faster the particles vibrate (which means a higher frequency).
the higher the energy, the faster the particles vibrate (which means a higher frequency).

the lower the energy, the slower the particles vibrate (which means a higher frequency).
the lower the energy, the slower the particles vibrate (which means a higher frequency).

the higher the energy, the slower the particles vibrate (which means a lower frequency).
the higher the energy, the slower the particles vibrate (which means a lower frequency).

the lower the energy, the faster the particles vibrate (which means a lower frequency).
the lower the energy, the faster the particles vibrate (which means a lower frequency).

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
the higher the energy, the faster the particles vibrate (which means a higher frequency).

Reason: For waves (e.g., photons) energy is proportional to frequency (E = h·f), so more energy corresponds to a higher vibration frequency.