A clock with a period of 1 ns has a frequency of 1 GHz, or 1000 MHz.
stuff
The clock speed is measures in Mega Hertz (MHz)
MHz
166 MHz refers to a clock speed of 166 million cycles per second. In terms of data transfer, this is roughly equivalent to 166 million bits per second. The actual speed may vary depending on the specific device or system using this clock speed.
200 MHz
A rating of MHz, or GHz. Usually GHz when dealing with a processor. MHz when dealing with RAM.
Maximal clock speed. 8085: ? 8085A: 3 MHz 8085AH: 5 MHZ
The Motorola 68030 was available in models ranging from 16 MHz to 50 MHz.
The clock speed of the 8085 depends on the particular chip chosen. The basic 8085 could run up to around 3 MHz. The -1 version could run up to around 6 MHz. The -2 version could run up to around 5 MHz. In each case, the crystal frequency had to be exactly twice the desired clock frequency, i.e. 6 Mhz, 12 MHz, and 10 MHz, respectively. In all cases, the minimum clock frequency was 500 KHz. (Crystal 1 MHz)
The clock period of a microprocessor is the inverse of its clock frequency. For a clock frequency of 100 MHz, the clock period can be calculated as follows: Clock Period = 1 / Frequency = 1 / 100,000,000 seconds = 10 nanoseconds. Therefore, the clock period is 10 nanoseconds.
obviously about 100 MHz, since the core speed is calculated by multiplying the system clock speed and the given multiplier.
The period of a waveform is the reciprocal of its frequency. To find the period (T) in seconds, you can use the formula ( T = \frac{1}{f} ), where ( f ) is the frequency in hertz. For a frequency of 4 MHz (4,000,000 Hz), the period is ( T = \frac{1}{4,000,000} ) seconds, which equals 250 nanoseconds (ns). Therefore, the period of a 4 MHz clock waveform is 250 ns.