No, one Hz (Hertz) is equal to one cycle per second. To convert to one million cycles per second, you would need one MHz (Megahertz).
according to my text book "10^9 cycles per second. "
The number of cycles a wave passes a stationary point in one second is called the frequency of the wave. It is measured in Hertz (Hz), where 1 Hz is equivalent to one cycle per second.
The hertz is a unit of frequency, which is defined as the number of cycles per second.
The frequency of the energy wave would be 1 million waves per minute, which can be converted to cycles per second (Hertz) by dividing by 60 (since there are 60 seconds in a minute). So, the frequency would be approximately 16,667 Hz.
Frequency is the number of complete cycles passing a point each second. It is typically measured in hertz (Hz), where one hertz is equivalent to one cycle per second.
according to my text book "10^9 cycles per second. "
One hertz is one cycle per second... A megahertz is 1 million cycles per second
One million cycles per second.
One Megahertz is one million cycles per second.
1 million cycles per second is 1 MHz (1 megahertz). Each cycle has a period of 1 microsecond (one millionth of a second).
No! 300 Megahertz is equal to 300 MILLION cycles per second. The unit "Hertz" is defined as cycles per second, and the prefix "Mega" means millions.
Yes, 1 gigahertz is 1 billion cycles per second
Another name for Hertz is cycles per second. So a Megahertz is 1 million cycles per second.
Gigahertz
Yes, megahertz (MHz) is a unit of frequency that represents one million cycles per second. It is commonly used to measure the clock speed of a computer processor or the frequency of a radio wave.
One megahertz
One Mhz, or Mega Hertz