I think so this will help you
Virtual memory does not physically exist while physical memory does.
Where there is not enough physical memory available for the required application, the application and its data are staged through the physical memory with the excess mapped onto a section of hard disk drive. Using this technique the memory appears to be bigger that it actually is (although it is slowed down by the staging process). The bit on the disk is called the virtual memory.
Physical memory or real memory is the actual memory installed in the computer system for instance a DDR module, Virtual memory is usually a file on a disk drive that the operating system uses to store information (swap-to-from) when the real memory becomes full, for instance the page (swap) file on a Windows or Linux system.
Virtual memory does not physically exist while physical memory does.
Where there is not enough physical memory available for the required application, the application and its data are staged through the physical memory with the excess mapped onto a section of hard disk drive. Using this technique the memory appears to be bigger that it actually is (although it is slowed down by the staging process). The bit on the disk is called the virtual memory.
The difference between virtual and physical memory is that virtual memory refers to memory space while physical memory are chips like RAM. The memory space for virtual memory is made by operating system when there is insufficient physical memory.
pagefile is the virtual memory
Swap slices are used as virtual memory storage areas when the system does not have enough physical memory to handle current processes. The virtual memory system maps physical copies of files on disk to virtual addresses in memory. Physical memory pages which contain the data for these mappings can be backed by regular files in the file system, or by swap space. If the memory is backed by swap space it is referred to as anonymous memory because there is no identity assigned to the disk space backing the memory.
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explain the logical& physical memory
Virtual Memory Manager
Physical memory is how much total memory your computer actually has. Available memory is what memory you have that is not being used.
Physical memory (in a computer) is 'better' than virtual memory because it is much faster (and speed is usually the main concern in this subject area). Physical memory (or RAM) is where the programs and variables are stored whilst they are working. Virtual memory is only used when the computer runs out of physical memory. Virtual memory is just one or more files saved on a hard disk. Access to the hard disk is much slower than access to the physical memory.
1.5 of physical memory
NONE! The 80186 was an advanced version of the 8086 but did not include support for virtual memory. It had a 64K physical address space. The 80286 was the first Intel CPU to support virtual memory but it's capabilities were limited.
Physical memory, as with all computer resources, is managed by the system. Applications access virtual memory exclusively, no exceptions, ever. Physical memory (RAM), the pagefile, and many other files on the hardisk make up the virtual memory system. This system has been extensively researched and tested and it usually performs very well. Virtual memory is VERY complex, and the designers understand it better than you do.
Virtual memory is a type of memory that is allocated by the operating system and is used to speed up operations. Cache memory is RAM that the CPU can access faster than regular ram which is considered physical memory. When the CPU is looking for data, it checks the cache memory first, recently used data will still be in the cache. If it does not find it there, it moves on to use the physical memory. Anytime a program or file is opened, it is first loaded into RAM (physical memory).