The full wave length of 10 MHz is 30 metres.
The frequency can't be 30 Mhz 30 Mhz is a ham radio frequency but to calculate the wavelength, devide 300 by the frequency in Mhz that will give you 10 meters (300/ƒ)
750 million
300 MHz: λ = about 3.278 feet.
An aerial length of 750 metres is required
The effective length of a half-wave dipole antenna is typically about half the wavelength of the frequency it is designed to operate at. This means the antenna's total length is approximately ( \frac{468}{f(MHz)} ) feet, where ( f ) is the frequency in megahertz. For example, at 100 MHz, the half-wave dipole would be about 4.68 feet long. This length allows the antenna to resonate efficiently, maximizing its radiation pattern and performance.
10 to the power 7 Hz is 10 MHz, so that is HF (high frequency); this range of radio waves goes from 3 to 30 MHz.
10 to the power 7 Hz is 10 MHz, so that is HF (high frequency); this range of radio waves goes from 3 to 30 MHz.
Assuming you are asking what has a shorter wavelength 1 Mhz or 1 Ghz, then the answer is 1 Ghz. But the way the question was phrased, Mhz or Ghz, well 1000 Mhz is = 1 GHz. Note that 1 hz is just 1 cycle/sec. 1 Mhz is 1,000,000 cycles/sec and 1 Ghz is 1,000,000,000 cycles/sec. So to fit 1000 cycles in one second (as compared to 1 cycle in a second) the cycles have to be shorter (faster up and down sinusoidal wave).
The period of 1 MHz is 1 microsecond. The waveform is irrelevant.
Classic FM typically broadcasts at a frequency of 100-101 MHz, which corresponds to a wavelength range of approximately 3-3.4 meters.
The frequency of the wave is the reciprocal of its period. Therefore, the frequency of a wave with a period of 9.26 ns is approximately 108 MHz (1 / 9.26 x 10^-9 seconds = 108 x 10^6 Hz).
Wavelength is calculated in MHz not Hz, and the formula is Wavelength = 300 / MHz