The wavelength is inverse to the frequency, meaning the frequency in this case will increase.
when you increase the frequency, then the wavelength decreases. :)
No, the frequency decreases as the wavelength lengthens. The shorter the wavelength the higher the frequency.
Wavelength is inversely proportional to Frequency. Wavelengths increase as Frequency decreases.
No. Greater frequency = less period.
A system bus frequency is 1600 MHz. A CPU frequency is 166 MHz to almost 4GHz.
System bus frequency and multiplier
There is no connection between CPU frequency and ram value. But you meant ram frequency then it's possible nowadays motherboards allow to overclock factory settings by setting up higher values for CPU and ram voltages. Usually when you are overclocking FSB the ram frequency changes too.
You can adjust a great number of things with a CPU. Core frequency, link / bridge / bus frequency, and voltage are just a few things you can change.
The wavelength is inverse to the frequency, meaning the frequency in this case will increase.
The faster the CPU can push data around the motherboard is mesured as a frequency
When you have more than one core in your CPU, you have a multi core CPU. No matter how many cores are in your CPU, everyone of them is working at the same frequency. It is very important to know that when you have a dual core CPU for example and there are two cores wowking at 2Ghz each, your CPU is NOT 4Ghz it is still 2Ghz.
No thats false!
No thats false!
graphics base frequency
it depends on the CPU.. but the frequency is measured in herts
P states