I assume you mean candela seconds vs candelas per second. The first is derived by multiplying candelas by time, the second is achieved by dividing candelas by time
Meter Kilogram Second Ampere Kelvin Mole Candela
The energy dissipated.
3 cycles / 12 seconds = 0.25 cycles / second, or 0.25 Hz.3 cycles / 12 seconds = 0.25 cycles / second, or 0.25 Hz.3 cycles / 12 seconds = 0.25 cycles / second, or 0.25 Hz.3 cycles / 12 seconds = 0.25 cycles / second, or 0.25 Hz.
If you mean like "bytes per second", just divide the file size by the number of seconds. The number of seconds will be shown in any audio player, such as Winamp.
joule seconds or newton meter seconds depending on what system you use
1 minute 21 second and 42 milli second is equal to 81.42 seconds.
A nano second is 1 billionth of a second. So there are 999,999,999 nano seconds difference between a second and a nanosecond
Fundamental QuantitiesLength (meter)Mass (kilogram)Time (second)Electric current (ampere)Thermodynamic temperature (kelvin)Amount of substance (mole)Luminous intensity (candela)
7 seconds of delay
Meter Kilogram Second Ampere Kelvin Mole Candela
time is a quantity while seconds is the unit in physics
meter, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, mol, candela
Kilogram, Meter, Candela, Mole, Kelvin, Ampere, and Second I believe
The three fundamental measurements are length, mass, and time. The fundamental Standard International units, therefore, are meters, kilograms, and seconds. These are also known as SI base units.
The energy dissipated.
There are 60 nano-seconds in a second. :)
There are 7 units: metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, mole, candela.