No. Hertz, megahertz, gigahertz, etc, are all measures of frequency. This is used to quantify a rate of change, such as the speed of the processor's clock signal. If anything changes at a rate of N Hertz, the observed item changes its state from one state to another N times per second. For example, a 10 MHz clock crystal oscillates between its two states 10 million times per second.
RAM (memory) is typically measured in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes, or in multiples of bits (kilobits, megabits, etc). RAM is implemented as an electronic device also is characterized by a number of frequencies, such as the maximum speed of change for certain input signals, or the maximum rate of change of certain output signals of a RAM chip. In that sense, a frequency figure can very well be used to describe certain characteristics of RAM, however, the principal characteristic is its storage capacity in bits or bytes.
Storage (harddrive) is also quantified in bytes, megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes.
Hz on a RAM is the speed of which the hardware can read. the higher the Hz the faster RAM.
400 Hz to about 5000 Hz
2 400 000 000 Hz
400 HZ
The unit of measurement for frequency of wavelengths per second is Hertz (Hz).
400 Hz is used in aircraft because it allows transformers to be much smaller than if the frequency was lower. A 50 Hz transformer would weight eight times as much. But 400 Hz is not useful for transmitting over distances of more than a few hundred metres because of power losses.
Hz (hertz) and watts are different units of measurement. Hz measures frequency while watts measure power. You cannot directly convert Hz to watts without additional information about the system such as voltage or current.
Aircraft use 400 Hz for their power supplies because it allows them to use smaller and lighter components.
Hertz and short for Hertz = Hz
The second octave of 200 Hz is 400 Hz. In music theory, each octave represents a doubling of the frequency of the previous octave.
Hertz, a frequency measurement unit equal to one cycle per second.
There are other frequencies, such as 60 Hz, 25 Hz, and 400 Hz in common use. Please restate the question - it does not make sense.