Light.
10 mhZ
Most work between 300 MHz to 450 MHz.
Frequencies over 30 Mhz normally travel through the ionosphere, whereas frequencies under 30 Mhz will normally bounce off the ionosphere, and back to earth.
Depends on where you are. Each nation has its own rules. There are legal frequencies in the 125 KHz, 13.56 MHz, 800-950 MHz, and 2.4 MHz bands. Higher frequencies are coming.
The XM Radio satellites use S-band frequencies from 2,332.50 through 2,345.00 MHz, and Sirius Radio uses adjacent frequencies 2,320.00 through 2,332.50 MHz.
Ultra high frequency designates electromagnetic waves with frequencies between 300 MHz and 3 GHz or 3,000 MHz.
Yes, megahertz (MHz) is larger than hertz (Hz). One megahertz equals one million hertz, so MHz is a unit used to measure frequencies that are in the millions of cycles per second, while Hz is used for frequencies in general. Therefore, 1 MHz is 1,000,000 Hz.
Yes we can. At least for the commercial broadcast stations in the USA.AM stations:Carrier frequencies are at every 10 KHz, between 550 KHz and 1700 KHz.FM stations:Carrier frequencies are at every 0.2 MHz, between 88.1 MHz and 107.9 MHz.
In the US, the AM broadcast band occupies 550 - 1,700 KHz, with assigned carrier frequencies spaced by 10 KHz. The FM broadcast band occupies 88 - 108 MHz, with assigned carrier frequencies spaced by 200 KHz (0.2 MHz) starting at 88.1 MHz.
Longwave frequencies typically range from 30 kHz to 300 kHz in the electromagnetic spectrum, corresponding to 0.03 MHz to 0.3 MHz in MegaHertz (MHz).
Depends on the radio, it can be just about anything.
A volt is zero MHz. These are two different values. The only thing in common is that they both are electrical terms. MHz is a reference to voltage at radio frequencies.