You divide by 60/60/24, which leads to the answer of 1.1574x10-14 of a day.
1 billionths of second 1/1,000,000,000
Electromagnetic waves between 700 and 400 billionths of a meter are in the visible light spectrum. They have wavelengths ranging from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers, encompassing the colors of the rainbow.
An atomic clock is extremely precise, typically accurate to within a few billionths of a second per day. These clocks use the natural oscillations of atoms to keep time, making them one of the most accurate timekeeping devices available.
Atomic clocks work by measuring the vibrations of atoms. Specifically, they use the oscillations of atoms in a hyperfine transition of cesium-133. By counting these vibrations, the clock can keep extremely accurate time, with deviations of only a few billionths of a second per day.
There are 1000 milliseconds in one second.
It is one billionths of a second.
2.4 billionths of a second
One billionths of one.
5 billionths = 0.000000005
The billionths place would be where the underscore is. 0.0000_ The order after the decimal is tenths, hundredths, thousandths, millionths, billionths.
Yes, because 700 is bigger than 400 and both have the same denominator, in billionths
It is 0.000000003 metres (3 billionths of a metre).
"Nano" (as a prefix for any kind of unit) means billionth. One nanosecond = 0.000 000 001 seconds.
Thirty-two billionths can be written as 32 billionths, which is represented numerically as 0.000000032. In scientific notation, it can be expressed as 3.2 x 10^-8.
1 second = 1/86400 days. To convert a value in seconds to days, divide by 86400.
17 billions= 17,000,000,00017 billionths= 1/17,000,000,000
15 billionths