You can't ! MHz or Megahertz is a measurement of frequency - mbps or mega-bits per second is a measurement of data transfer speed.
600 MHz or 800 MHz
in GE interface the STM-1 can carry 155 Mbps but on SDH it will carry 142 Mbps
135 mbps
It is desirable to have a higher Mbps in almost all cases. Mbps = Mega bits per second. It describes the throughput (or bandwidth) or data through a network interface.
There are 1024 kilobits in a megabit, so 384 kbps divided by 1024 equals .375 mbps.
1 MBPs how many MHZ
To convert MHz to Hz, you need to multiply the value in MHz by 1,000,000. For example, if you have a frequency of 100 MHz, the equivalent in Hz would be 100,000,000 Hz (100 x 1,000,000).
To convert from megahertz (MHz) to hertz (Hz), you would multiply the value in MHz by 1,000,000 (since 1 MHz = 1,000,000 Hz). For example, if you have a frequency of 5 MHz, you would multiply 5 by 1,000,000 to get 5,000,000 Hz.
1 MHz = 1,000,000 Hz 40,000 Hz = (40,000/1,000,000) = 0.04 MHz
G Hz is 1000 bigger than MHz now we can write that1GHz = 1000MHz
Not possible ! MHz is a measure of frequency, km is a unit of distance - while gigabits is a quantity of memory.
Those units measure different kinds of things. You can't convert one to the other.
Divide by 1000. 4500 MHz = 4.5 GHz
38 MHz. digital bit-rates vary depending on compression, modulation, typically QPSK. Expect at least 30 Mbps.
Divide 300 by 2,500,000,000 to get a wavelength of 0.00000015 metres. Wavelength metres = 300 / f(mHz) = 300 / 2500 mHz = 0.12 metres. (2.5 gHz = 2500 mHz)
To convert MHz to seconds, you need to invert the frequency value. 1 MHz is equal to 1/1,000,000 seconds or 1 microsecond. So, to convert MHz to seconds, you would invert the MHz value. For example, if you have a frequency of 100 MHz, the equivalent value in seconds would be 1 / 100,000,000 seconds or 10 nanoseconds.
{| ! Category ! Maximum data rate ! Usual application | CAT 1 (de facto name, never a standard)Up to 1 Mbps (1 MHz) analog voice (POTS)Basic Rate Interface in ISDNDoorbell wiring CAT 2 (de facto name, never a standard) 4 Mbps Mainly used in the IBM cabling system for Token Ring networks CAT 3 16 Mbps Voice (analog most popular implementation)10BASE-T Ethernet. CAT 4 20 Mbps Used in 16 Mbps Token Ring.Otherwise not used much. Was only a standard briefly and never widely installed.CAT 5 100 MHz 100 Mbps TPDDI155 Mbps ATM.No longer supported; replaced by 5E.10/100BASE-T4/16MBps Token RingAnalog Voice CAT 5E 100 MHz 100 Mbps TPDDI155 Mbps ATMGigabit Ethernet.Offers better near-end crosstalk than CAT 5 CAT 6 Up to 250 MHz Minimum cabling for data centers in TIA-942.Quickly replacing category 5e.CAT 6E Up to 500 MHz(field-tested to 500 MHz) Support for 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GBASE-T.) May be either shielded (STP, ScTP, S/FTP) or unshielded (UTP). This standard published in Feb. 2008.Minimum for Data Centers in ISO data center standard. CAT 7(ISO Class F) 600 MHz1.2 GHz in pairs with Siemon connector Full-motion videoTeleradiologyGovernment and manufacturing environmentsFully Shielded (S/FTP) system using non-RJ45 connectors but backwards compatible with hybrid cords.Until February 2008, the only standard (published in 2002) to support 10GBASE-T for a full 100m. or go to http://searchdatacenter.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid80_gci211752,00.html |}