It's one million per second.
Typical radar operates in the 50 to 330 megahertz bands. However, long range radar uses ultra high frequencies in the 300 to 1,000 megahertz range.
MHz is the abbreviation for megahertz. 1 million Hertz = 1 megahertz. A hertz is a measurement of frequency = 1 cycle per second. 900 MHz = 900,000,000 cycles per second. This is not a figure which can be translated into distance. Your question is akin to asking what is 60 miles per hour in tons.
Kilo means times 1000, mega means times 1,000,000. So 0.005 megahertz = 5000 Hz = 5 kiloHz. Hertz (not Herz) is abbreviated to Hz
The derived SI unit for frequency is hertz (Hz) The common metric multipliers are: kilohertz (kHz) = 1,000 Hz Megahertz (MHz) = 1,000,000 Hz and Gigahertz (GHz) = 1,000,000,000 Hz.
not very fast
1.7 megahertz is bigger than 108 megahertz
Megahertz or megahertzes is the plural of megahertz. Both are acceptable
Megahertz is ACTUALLY a measurement of the speed of a microprocessor. How fast a computer can process instructions depends partially on the speed of the microprocessor, which is determined by it's clock speed, word size, and cach size, and whether it is single or dual core. Clock speed is measured in megahertz (MHz), millions of cycles per second, or in gigahertz (GHz), billions of cycles per second.
There are 2300 Megahertz in 2.3 gigahertz.Formula:1 Gigahertz = 1000 Megahertz
I Trawl the Megahertz was created in 2003.
Megahertz. Kilo = 1000. Mega =1,000,000
MHz or Megahertz
Decibels are a logarithmic way of expressing a magnitude, megahertz is a frequency. Specifically, 1 megahertz = 10^6 cycles/second There is no answer to the question.
Our bodies require a minimum of 70 megahertz to function.
They are actually the same thing. ( a megacycle is also called a megahertz)
One Megahertz is one million cycles per second.
Yes, and the higher amount of megahertz the less flickering until about 85 megahertz which there is no flickering.