Cycles per second is the correct unit for mechanical waves. Hertz (Hz) is the correct unit for electromagnetic waves like light, radio, and microwaves. Most people use Hertz for everything, but that is not correct usage.
Hertz are a frquency, so if you have 1 hertz it is 1 hertz/second if you have 2 hertz =2 hertz second and so on, so a Intel processor at 2.4ghz would be 2.4 billion hertz a second.
Microwaves are produced when?
Microwaves do not 'give off' radiation as such. Microwaves are radiation.
no, because microwaves do not take up space
Cycles per second is the correct unit for mechanical waves. Hertz (Hz) is the correct unit for electromagnetic waves like light, radio, and microwaves. Most people use Hertz for everything, but that is not correct usage.
The question is not correctly phrased, Infrared is electromagnetic radiation which consists of waves. Amplitude is a measure of the maximum "strength" or height of the wave and therefore will have a whole range of values from 0 upwards. Infrared does not have a specific range of amplitude however it will have a range of frequencies ( visible light Red end 4 x 1014 Hertz - 3 x 1011 Hertz Microwaves ) and wavelength (visible light Red end 750 nanometres - 1000000 nm nanometres Microwaves)
The total range of all electromagnetic waves encompasses from approximately 1023 hertz to 0 hertz or, in corresponding wavelengths, from 10 -13 centimeter to infinity. This includes cosmic-ray photons, gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet radiation, visible light, infrared radiation, microwaves, and radio waves.
Hertz are a frquency, so if you have 1 hertz it is 1 hertz/second if you have 2 hertz =2 hertz second and so on, so a Intel processor at 2.4ghz would be 2.4 billion hertz a second.
Microwaves are produced when?
Hertz. Hz
Microwaves do not 'give off' radiation as such. Microwaves are radiation.
Microwaves
No he did not. Microwaves were first theoretically predicted by James Maxwell in 1864 (137 years after Newton's death) They were first actually produced by Heinrich Hertz in 1888. (161 years after Newton's death.)
Unsure.
Hertz is the unit of measure for frequency, named after Heinrich Hertz
where are Samsung microwaves made