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there was one kind of second. it is called nanoseconds. Usually, it can be seen faster moving than a second in a timer.
500 nanoseconds is a much shorter amount of time than 1000 microseconds 500 nanoseconds = 0.5 microseconds 1000 microseconds = 1,000,000 nanoseconds
M-8
The answer is 55 and 60
1/(any number more than 0.5) 2/(any number more than 1) 3/(any number more than 1.5) 4/(any number more than 2) 5/(any number more than 2.5) 6/(any number more than 3) . . etc.
There are 1,000,000,000 nanoseconds in a second. There are 1x60x60x24x365.25 or 31,557,600 seconds in a year. So nanoseconds in a second is over 60 times more
there was one kind of second. it is called nanoseconds. Usually, it can be seen faster moving than a second in a timer.
500 nanoseconds is a much shorter amount of time than 1000 microseconds 500 nanoseconds = 0.5 microseconds 1000 microseconds = 1,000,000 nanoseconds
M-8
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There are two different types of RAM: DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory) and SRAM (Static Random Access Memory). DRAM is more common. It needs to be refreshed about 1,000 times per second. It also supports access times of about 60 nanoseconds. SRAM is more expensive. It does not need to refresh so it is faster than DRAM. It supports access times as low as 10 nanoseconds.
No. There are roughly pi * 10 million seconds in a year, which is around 30 times more than the number of microseconds in a second.
Half-lives of radioactive isotopes are between several nanoseconds and more than 10e22 years.
A number is greater than another number if it is more positive than the second number. 21.1 is more positive than 20. If you want to think of it in terms of the number line: If you write the number line horizontally with negative numbers to the left, zero in the middle and positive numbers to the right a number is greater than another if it is to the right (on the number line) than the second. 21.1 is to the right of 20, so 21.1 is greater than 20.
1000 nanoseconds = 1 microsecond
The fourteen billionth power of ten is ' 1 ' with 14 billion zeros after it. It's a number without any physical significance ... more than the distance across the observable universe in nanometers, more than the number of nanoseconds since the big bang, and more than the number of elementary particles in the universe. Even if it were a reasonable number, you've given us no unit with it, so there's no way to express it in years, gallons, pounds, dollars, inches, or anything else.
The answer is 55 and 60