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The local oscillator could be either 1165 KHz (710+455) or 255 KHz (710-455).
None, the firebird formula 455 was built between 1971 and 1974. The formula was only avilable with the 400 and 350 from 1975 to 1979. According to the data displayed by yearone.com, there were 7528 Trans Am Coupes produced with 455's. All of these units were equipped with Manual transmissions. The rarest of the group is the 1976 Limited Edition 455 with T-tops.
Assuming that the receiver uses a high-side local oscillator and an IF of 455 KHz, the image frequency is 910 KHz above. When tuned to 1600 KHz, the image frequency would be 2,510 KHz.
Those AM receivers that are built in superheterodyne configuration almost always have 455 KHz as their IF frequency. I've known this now for about 60 years, but still have no idea where that number came from. It seems an unwise choice, since, for roughly the lower half of the AM band, it places the local oscillator necessarily smack in the upper half of the band. But I'm sure that several engineers smarter than I had good reasons for putting it there.
There are exactly 100 frequency spots on the commercial FM dial, and they're shared by the thousands of FM stations in the US. That means that every possible frequency has several stations on it, in different cities. In order to determine which of the many stations on that frequency you're listening to, we'd have to know where you're located while you listen.
There was no Byzantine state before the move of the capital to Constantinople (Byzantium = Constantinople), unless you mean 1261 when the city was recovered from its western conquerors. But I suspect you don't. The transfer of 330 made the predominantly Greek-speaking east of the Roman Empire more central. The new location proved more defensible as Rome fell to invading armies in 410 and 455. While the Western Empire finally ended in 476, the Eastern held out (apart from the interlude of Latin rule from 1204) until 1453 when Constantinople finally fell to the Ottoman Turks.
They were known as Vandals.
There was not an empire which led Rome and there was not a conquest of Rome. Rome had an empire: the Roman Empire. Although the invasions by the Germanic peoples led to the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire, the city of Rome was never conquered. Ancient Rome was sacked by the Visigoths in 410 and by the Vandals in 455, but it was not conquered. Both Visigoths and Vandals withdrew after the sack. They did so before units of the Roman army from elsewhere in the Roman Empire would catch up with them.
29% of 455= 29% * 455= 0.29 * 455= 131.95
65% of 455= 65% * 455= 0.65 * 455= 295.75
455-100 = 355
30% of $455= 30% x $455= 0.30 x $455= $136.50
The leaders of the Gupta Empire were the following: Chandragupta I (320-355), Samudragupta (375-414), Chandragupta II (375-414), Kumaragupta I (414-455), Skandagupta (455-467), Purugupta (467-473), Kumaragupta II (473-479), Budhagupta (476-495), Narasimhagupta, Kumaragupta III, Vishnugupta (540-550).
If you are referring to the city of Rome, as opposed to the Roman Empire, three Germanic peopled sacked Rome. The Visigoths in 410, the Vandals in 455 and the Ostrogoths in 546.
One fifth of 455 is 455/5 = 91
The city of Rome was never conquered. What was conquered was most of the lands of the Western Roman Empire. What happened in 455 was that Rome was sacked by the Vandals. They did not stay in order not to have to face troops which would have been gathered around Italy to deal with them.
The leaders of the Gupta Empire were the following: Chandragupta I (320-355), Samudragupta (375-414), Chandragupta II (375-414), Kumaragupta I (414-455), Skandagupta (455-467), Purugupta (467-473), Kumaragupta II (473-479), Budhagupta (476-495), Narasimhagupta, Kumaragupta III, Vishnugupta (540-550).