thumb|Diagram illustrating the relationship between the wavenumber and the other properties of harmonic waves.
thumb|Diagram illustrating the relationship between the wavenumber and the other properties of harmonic waves.
In the physical sciences, the wavenumber (or wave number), also known as repetency, is the spatial frequency of a wave. Ordinary wavenumber is defined as the number of wave cycles divided by length; it is a physical quantity with dimension of reciprocal length, expressed in SI units of cycles per metre or reciprocal metre (m−1). Angular wavenumber, defined as the wave phase divided by length, is a quantity with dimension of angle per length and SI units of radians per metre. They are analogous to temporal frequency, respectively the ordinary frequency, defined as the number of wave cycles divided by time (in cycles per second or reciprocal seconds), and the angular frequency, defined as the phase angle divided by time (in radians per second).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).