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Frequency to Wavelength Converter — Data Converter
Wavelength ↔ Frequency
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Inputs
Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns a frequency into its wavelength and back. The two are inversely related through the wave’s speed: a higher frequency means a shorter wave. Enter the propagation speed — the speed of light by default — and read the wavelength instantly.

Use 3×10⁸ m/s for radio and light in vacuum or air. For a transmission line, enter the medium’s velocity of propagation to get the true physical length.

02

The units it covers

Wavelength and frequency are inversely linked through the wave’s speed in its medium — light in vacuum, or slower in cable or fibre.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
WavelengthmλPhysical length of one cycle
FrequencyHzfCycles per second
Velocitym/svWave speed (c = 3×10⁸ in vacuum)
03

The formula

Wavelength equals the propagation speed divided by frequency, so the two are inversely proportional at a given velocity:

Conversion
λ = v ÷ f

Where:

  • λ = wavelength in metres
  • f = frequency in hertz
  • v = propagation velocity (m/s)
04

Worked example

Find the wavelength of a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi signal in air.

Step 1 · The formula
λ = v ÷ f
Step 2 · Substitute
299792458 ÷ 2.4×10⁹ ≈ 0.125 m

So 2.4 GHz has a wavelength of about 12.5 cm in air.

05

The units in this example

Frequencysymbol: f (Hz)

Cycles per second. A higher frequency gives a shorter wavelength at the same speed.

Common wavelength ↔ frequency values
  • 2.4 GHz ≈ 0.125 m
  • 300 MHz ≈ 1 m
  • 1 GHz ≈ 0.30 m
  • f = v ÷ λ
Wavelengthsymbol: λ (m)

The physical length of one cycle. Longer for lower frequencies at a fixed speed.

Common wavelength ↔ frequency values
  • 0.125 m ≈ 2.4 GHz
  • 1 m ≈ 300 MHz
  • 0.30 m ≈ 1 GHz
  • λ = v ÷ f
06

FAQ

QWhat is the wavelength of 2.4 GHz?
About 12.5 cm in air, found by dividing the speed of light by the frequency.
QHow do I convert frequency to wavelength?
Divide the propagation speed (light in air) by the frequency in hertz.
08

Sources

NIST SP 811 — units · NIST — speed of light

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team