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OK, I picked this up on another board,a nd seeing that Eisboch, Tom,
Gene and Larry have had dealings with this stuff. I thought I'd present it here. It has my curiosity up as well. I'm not up on physics, concerning this so here goes: "I searched the web but couldn't find an answer to a simple question which for my purposes is really a matter of curiosity. Of course, sometimes these kinds of questions end up teaching me the most. Most defintions of wavelength are along the lines of the distance between points of corresponding phase of two consecutive cycles of a wave. I'm not an idiot , so I understand what is a pretty straightforward definition. What I don't get is why the term length? I mean, they don't call the amplitude the waveheight. I kind of think of it as a wavegap. If you painted a big sine wave on the street and asked me how long it was, I'd get one of those little rolling doohickies for measuring and trace the line through its curve. Without knowing the definition in advance, I wouldn't think you would be asking me the straight distance between two points of corresponding phase. I ask this question because I don't understand why it's called what it's called, not because I want to tell the experts they got it wrong. It's bugged me for a while, so I've finally decided to take the plunge and risk looking stupid. Thanks in advance for any responses or links to read..." -- Jim Carr |
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