1 GHz stands for 1 gigahertz, which represents one billion cycles per second. It is a unit used to measure the clock frequency of a computer processor, indicating how many instructions the processor can execute in a given amount of time. A processor with a higher GHz value typically indicates faster performance.
according to my text book "10^9 cycles per second. "
The clock period is the time duration of one clock cycle. For a clock frequency of 1 GHz (1 billion hertz), the clock period would be 1 nanosecond (1/1,000,000,000 seconds).
The speed at which data is transferred on a bus is measured in hertz (Hz), which represents the number of data transfers per second. The frequency of data being placed on the bus depends on the specific technology and protocol being used, such as 1MHz, 100MHz, or 1GHz for different types of buses.
The frequency with the shortest wavelength would be 100 GHz. Wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency, meaning higher frequencies have shorter wavelengths. So, 100 GHz would have a shorter wavelength compared to 1 GHz, 100 MHz, and 10 MHz.
"Struck" is the past tense of the verb "strike," which can mean to hit, collide with, or make contact with forcefully. It can also mean to be affected by a particular situation or emotion.
The period of 1GHz is 1 ns. The waveform is irrelevant.
well an iphone 3gs is only 600mhz (0.6ghz) so yes 1ghz is very good. most phone brands are going with a snapdragon 1ghz on theirr higher end models now
1000000000
Will do its job, but its outdated
SNAPDRAGON Mobile Processor
1000Mhz is equivalent to 1Ghz. Therefore 100Mhz is equivilent to 0.1Ghz
Plenty of older processors have had 1GHz FSB. Intel Celeron is one of them.
The Ku band of microwave frequencies ranges from 12 to 18 GHz. A frequency of 1GHz is not in the Ku band. There is no correspondence. Is the 1GHz setting on the spectrum analyzer a center frequency? Or is it one of the ends of the spectrum analyzed? Is it the width of the spectrum being analyzed? And if it is the latter, what is its center? Knowing these things will still not change the answer given, but may help to "sort out" a possible problem with the question the way it is written.
1000MHz makes 1GHz 2500MHz makes 2.5GHz
cores doesn't matter in windows 7. It needs 1ghz or higher processpr to run.
if you mean 1 gigahertz (GHz) equal to in Megabytes (Mb); then the answer is none; they are two different things!
Gb is a measure of capacity, GHz is a measure of speed. The two cannot be directly compared.