Physics - relationship b/t period and frequency

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MCAT guy

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Really simple question here...

So I'm doing a BR passage and it asks to pick the graph that relates period to frequency.

The formula is T = 1/f

So I think, inverse and linear relationship.

But the answer is a declining curve, kind of like this (but not touching axis)

Standard_Exponential_Distribution_R.jpg


My question is this, when I see an equation like T = 1/f, I'm thinking linear relationship. Just like F = ma, the relationship b/t F and m, I would think is a linear relationship on a graph like this:

image27.gif


How do I know when the direct or inverse relationship is linear or more curved?
 
its an inverse graph. Not linear proportional graph. Google inverse graphs if you want to learn about it again i think this was algebra 2/ pre calc stuff? otherwise when ever you see a inverse function just think of this graph. Direct proportional graphs such F= Ma is linearly distributed.
 
its an inverse graph. Not linear proportional graph. Google inverse graphs if you want to learn about it again i think this was algebra 2/ pre calc stuff? otherwise when ever you see a inverse function just think of this graph. Direct proportional graphs such F= Ma is linearly distributed.

yes but if F = ma is linearly distributed then why would T = 1/f not be linearly distributed...

It doesn't seem I can know this from the equation?
 
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