yes it does
it uses a PCIe BUS
PCIe version 2 doubled the fequency of the PCIe bus, theoretically doubling the throughput, It also allows for up to 32 lanes on one slot
Momentum is directly proportional to the velocity. Thrice the velocity means thrice the momentum.
PCIe or USB 2.0 bus standards.
As of right now, the fastest expansion bus found in a standard PC is a PCI-E or often seen as PCIe (PCI-E or PCIe stands for Peripheral Component Interconnect Express)Installing a PCIe card into your PC may be done only if the motherboards expansion slot will fit it. PCIe cards can fit into larger slots, but not smaller slots (obviously).
If frequency is tripled, the wavelength will be one-third of its original value. This is because the speed of the wave remains constant, so as frequency increases, wavelength decreases to maintain a constant speed.
South Bridge
Unless it's a very old computer, your graphics card will be either PCIe (PCI Express) or AGP, and if it was bought within the last... Say, four and a half years, it will definitely be a PCIe setup for graphics with your other component cards running on a PCI bus. If it was a gaming computer sold post-2003ish it will also have a PCIe bus.
PCIe version 2 operates at a frequency of 5 GT/s (gigatransfers per second) per lane. This translates to a raw data transfer rate of approximately 500 MB/s per lane, effectively doubling the bandwidth compared to PCIe version 1. Additionally, PCIe 2.0 supports multiple lanes, allowing for greater overall throughput depending on the configuration, such as x1, x4, x8, or x16.
normally the PCIE slot
As long as it has a PCI or PCIe bus on the board.
PCIe