F#
The enharmonic of Db is: C#
Yes, a gigabyte is larger than a kilobyte. One gigabyte is equivalent to 1,024 megabytes or 1,048,576 kilobytes.
GHz is a frequency used in radio frequency and computer proccessor speed. It has a frequency of 109. GB is short for Gigabyte. It is equal to approximately 10243 or equal to approximately 1024 megabytes.
M is a prefix that means "mega" which means million. There are a million bytes in a megabyte. A computer counts with 1024 b / kb, and the same for mb / gb and so on.1 Mb in a computer is equal to 1048576 bytesIn any system there will be overhead (block sizes, header tables, etc.) so the approximation of 1 million for 1024×1024 might hold but it might be too high too!You will not be able to put a file that is exactly 1048576 bytes on a memory stick that is advertised as capable of holding 1 Mb.
The enharmonic equivalent of Db is C#. Both notes have the same pitch but are spelled differently.
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The enharmonic note of Gb is F#
The enharmonic tone for F is E sharp.
G sharp (enharmonic A flat).
G flat is the enharmonic of F sharp; thumb and three fingers without the pinky on the left hand, and third finger with pinky on the right hand.
G sharp (enharmonic A flat).
Notes that have different names but sound the same are called enharmonic equivalents. An example of this is the notes F# and Gb, which are played at the same pitch on an instrument but have different names.
The notes that sound the same but are written differently are called enharmonic notes. An example of this is the notes F# (F sharp) and Gb (G flat) – they are played and sound the same but are notated differently.
F# and Gb are enharmonics. They share the same pitch, but have different functions in musical notation. Especially attuned musicians may differentiate F# and Gb particularly when they appear as thirds or fifths of chords, but yes, they are enharmonic equivalents.
F sharp is the enharmonic.
F sharp is the enharmonic.
That's a key that only exists in theory and not in practice (called an imaginary key), because it would have more than 7 flats. The key of G minor has 2 flats (Bb and Eb), so then key of G-flat minor would then have 9 flats. (The notes of that imaginary scale would be: Gb, Ab, Bbb, Cb, Db, Ebb, Fb, Gb) The enharmonic equivalent to G-flat is F-sharp, and F-sharp minor has 3 sharps.