60Hz has a wavelength of 5000 meters.
In North America, it is 60 Hertz, and in Europe it is 50 hertz.
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.
One hertz is defined as (1/sec) or (sec-1). So 1 hertz = (1 / 1 sec). Multiply by (60 sec / 1 min), the seconds units cancel, and you have (60 / 1 min) or 60RPM. See related links for more information.
No, the Philippines uses 220 volts at 60 Hz.
Do you mean definition? If so 110V = 110 volts-60hz = 60 hertz. Hertz is the cycles that the electricity runs at. 60hz. is the US standard. Europe is at 50hz.
60 mm/s
-30
The speed of any wave is the product of wavelength x frequency. In this case, because of the units chosen (meters, and hertz, which is equal to 1/second), the speed will come out in meters/second.
Wavelength= 10 mm. Frequency= 5.0 hertz. Speed= 50 mm/second (wavelength x frequency)
Several of them. Wavelength = speed of light/Hertz Wavelength = Planck's constant/mass of particle*Hertz And a few more that can be manipulated to find wavelength that I will let you discover on your own.
Radio waves are relatively very low in Frequency, yet the 60 cycles per second [ 60 hertz ] emenations from our appliances are lower [with longer Wavelengths].
No; hertz is frequency.Frequency times wavelength equals speed of travel.
In North America, it is 60 Hertz, and in Europe it is 50 hertz.
Period = 1/frequency = 1/60 = 16 and 2/3 milliseconds
Just divide the speed of light (in meters/second) by the frequency (in hertz) - that will give you the wavelength (in meters). You can then convert that to nm.
The word "wavelength" refers to the frequency of a wave. Wavelength is measured in hertz; the number of vibrations per second.
331/20 = 16.55 meters.And by the way ... The hertz is not 20. The 'frequency' is 20 hertz.