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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
DCnhrD1LzpwQzXEn