50. Hertz is the same as cycles per second.
50 cycles per second = 50 Hertz
"Hertz" is the new name for the "cycle" or "cycle per second", for the past few decades.
20 milliseconds
The unit is hertz (Hz) equal to 1 cycle/second.
There is nothing to convert. You are using the same unit of measurement. A hertz is a hertz, all you are dealing with is 10 less Hertz. 60 Hertz - 10 Hertz = 50 Hertz The difference is 10 Hertz. The math there is just to give you a clear example and illustrate my point. What you are asking for is similar to someone asking "how do you convert miles to miles" or "how do I convert inches to inches".
No. Lots of countries use 50 hertz for their national electricity services.
Probable the air conditioner doesn't work well.
Frequency is determined by the supply voltage, not by the load. However, for reactive loads (inductors or capacitors), the reactance will vary according to the frequency applied.
What is hertz
Hertz.
frequency = 1 / period f = 1/2 = 0.5 Hertz
Frequency = 1/0.02 = 50 cycles per second or 50 Hertz
In North America, it is 60 Hertz, and in Europe it is 50 hertz.
Vibration has amplitude and frequency, usually defined by acceleration and cycles per second (Hertz). It is measured with an accelerometer.
Each second.
The period of a 261 Hertz sound wave is 0.000383 Seconds
its the time taken for one complete vibration.
The same as charging at 60 hertz if you are in a county that runs at 50 hertz and have a charger that runs at 50 hertz.
It's "hertz", not "hetz". The number of hertz is the frequency. For example, if the current has a frequency of 50 hertz... well, that's the frequency. Hertz is equivalent to cycles/second, and it is sometimes written that way. So, 50 hertz could also be written as 50 cycles/second.
The unit is hertz (Hz) equal to 1 cycle/second.