That's actually fairly meaningless, 1nm is one nanometre, there are one billion (1 000 000 000) nanometres in one metre. There are 1 609 metres in one mile. The number of nanometres in one mile is to big to be really meaningful.
What is the wave length of 100 Hz? Answer You mean a sound wave in air. At a temperature of 20 degrees Celsius or 68 degrees Fahrenheit there is the speed of sound c = 343 meters per second. For a tone of f = 100 Hz the wavelength is lambda = c / f = 343 / 100 = 3.43 meters.The equation for the relationship between wavelength and frequency is X = frequency * wavelength, where X = the speed of the particle. For light, the wavelength of 100 Hz is 2.99 E8 cm, and for sound, the wavelength is 60 m.
100nm
1nm = 10^-9m
1knot=1.15078mph 1nm=6076.12' or1852meters
1nm = 0.001 micrometer
do
1nm. (Considering it consists only out of a few atoms.)
1 nanometer=1.0 × 10^-9 meters
Colloid
A watt is defined as: W=1V*1A=1J/sec=1Nm/sec
1 Nautical Mile = 1NM 1 Land Mile = 1M
As Big As A MoleCule (Length) Pretty Small Fact. Your Nail Grows 1NM every Second
radio wave 30cm> microwave 1nm-30cm infrared 700nm-1nm visible light 400nm-700nm the only wave that can be seen by human eyes ultraviolet 60nm-400nm x rays 0.001nm-60nm gamma rays >0.1nm