Terme de Glossaire
electromagnetic wave
An electromagnetic wave is a model used to represent electromagnetic rays. Its behaviour is consistent corresponding to a sinusoidal function and is characterised by three variables: a wavelength (distance between two maxima), a speed (speed of light, if in a vacuum) and a frequency. A light wave in an electromagnetic wave whose wavelength corresponds to the visible spectrum, i.e. between 380 and 780 nanometres. As for radio waves (including GPS signals), they have a far greater wavelength (sometimes kilometres).
eNq1mG1v2jAQx9/zKaK8J4FSCp0C1cZgQ2o1RkGb9qYyyQHOjJ36gYd9+jmEbmFK1mLwK4Tt3F18f//u4uBuuyLOGrjAjHbculdzHaAhizBddNzpZFBtu3fdShCjNcota3k1r95ynZAgITpuOuvNAFHhfX+4/wj6eeBut+IEbBZDKI/WKYmJ9xmJ5QNK0jVOsGY4clYglyzquImS+1EnEJLrKLobxn+KBIUQ+IeR/Gz8dJ0fD/zU2BusKgH8HtFFoVGgRjZDxTlQ2UMSFozvCk2HT42b+u2VWdBYjEEwxUMYIbkccbbGEUSFfuaICDByMt9Ej8DXBGTqpNC4H66EkW0Uo+0YnofFMb/Xsz25ldVatd5qNRvN1lVb/zaNXPHcThVnYiV8nY1mu3F94wP1gWilcrZCCwoSh9UNWoNhlkaMS0Qs5QeL3rHOLPnh8PyqDiIsEoJ2XiwS061CHOlp4JoG9l4kfYMJ13wies/+sU8VIf6JUU8P9LAUcQqnHlNUlkBkMDbdiB6jErblGTXjntwetIhBXM7sL0aLmT9SM4JDU7hp/igQcjoelrLNFhc+IAFTbg8M3zCN2EZcHjj5BFuKPtkz8z81s3lrfJZ+aCWV1Jy+4iwBX2MIi3PoMqRzdi5XtDiLTf2Rpg1Z7jshFiICJb1Q1RA3Wo8vrZs1xds7TdlEodFP/YmpVL4q4LvH/d9C0zjqvCTZDMU2+K51WRr36SrPDvpbmuSGmZ55MUWWUibine8TqDch1r2hp8jCQ6H+cLHJ/FzFtdewWynrWZuTsdNS6LOsIJ6cL9Pj91rtP7efPTx/6JsLfUiu4Ix0ZKS2xtNh//KI/tvMWgt7dMQUe272jSeSmFFbXZCalRHRvCjotNIB14j4Mp/jknuUUlkGfnaH060Efnp/0638BitG+Iw=
hdCvU7QrcXnqfSmk