One micro second
Another name for Hertz is cycles per second. So a Megahertz is 1 million cycles per second.
To be very technical, it depends on what the 'm' means in the question. If the frequency in the question is 5 mHz = 5 mega-Hertz then mega = million, 5 mega = 5 million so 5 mega Hertz = 5 million Hertz. 5 mHz = 5 million cycles per second But a small 'm' often means 'milli'. That's probably not what you meant, but if it is, then 5 mHz = 5 milli Hertz = 0.005 Hz That would mean 0.005 of a cycle per second, or 200 seconds to finish one whole cycle.
One hertz is equivalent to one cycle per second. Therefore, a hertz is equal to one count per second (cps).
according to my text book "10^9 cycles per second. "
There can be any number. Cycles per second are referred to as Hertz
There are zero s-1 in a hertz (Hz). The unit hertz is defined as one cycle per second, not cycles per second per second (s-1).
No! 300 Megahertz is equal to 300 MILLION cycles per second. The unit "Hertz" is defined as cycles per second, and the prefix "Mega" means millions.
One cycle per second (cps) is the same as one hertz (Hz); they both represent the frequency of a periodic waveform.
A hertz is equal to one cycle per second, so it would have 60 vibrations per minute.
mHz means milli hertz, MHz means mega hertz. Hertz is a measure of frequency, or cycles per second. milli hertz is how many cycles per millisecond or 0.001 seconds.
A cycle is one complete revolution of the sine wave. Hertz is the frequency of the alternating current, how many complete cycles per second. 60 Hertz would have 60 cycles each second.
The frequency of a wave is a measure of how many wavelengths pass a certain point each second. It is typically measured in hertz (Hz), where one hertz is equivalent to one cycle per second.