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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
N9cF9ZJHeBAcKTLg