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).
|
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
NCyTWGqcNYC74Kc2