Period = 1/ frequency
1 / 60Hz = 16 and 2/3 milliseconds
The period of a wave can be calculated using the formula T = 1/f, where T is the period and f is the frequency. Given that the frequency is 60 Hz, the period of the wave is T = 1/60 = 0.0167 seconds.
period is the time duration of one cycle of the waveform, and is measured in seconds/cycle. AC power at 50 Hz will have a period of 1/50 = 0.02 seconds/cycle. A 60 Hz power system has a period of 1/60 = 0.016667 seconds/cycle
Period = 1/frequency = 1/60 = 16 and 2/3 milliseconds
10 Hz 10 Hz
the maximum rating is 60 hz . it is work in50hz
There is no inherent disadvantage of 50 Hz compared with 60 Hz, bearing in mind that systems that run at 50 Hz are designed to run at 50 Hz.
The period of a wave is the inverse of its frequency. In this case, a frequency of 0.2 Hz corresponds to a period of 5 seconds (1 divided by 0.2).
The periods for waves with frequencies of 1 Hz, 5 Hz, 10 Hz, and 20 Hz are 1 second, 0.2 seconds, 0.1 seconds, and 0.05 seconds, respectively. Period is the inverse of frequency, so to calculate the period, you take the reciprocal of the frequency.
In North America 60 Hertz. Europe 50 Hertz.
Everything, in a country like the USA where the normal supply works on 60 Hz.
600. Absolutely.
If a bulb has 50 Hz frequency and it's supply is 60 Hz frequency, it will still glow, despite the allowance of 10 HZ frequency.