.875microseconds
500 nanoseconds is a much shorter amount of time than 1000 microseconds 500 nanoseconds = 0.5 microseconds 1000 microseconds = 1,000,000 nanoseconds
1000 nanaseconds
nanoseconds.
1 millisecond = 1,000 microseconds = 1,000,000 nanoseconds 10 milliseconds = 10,000,000 nanoseconds (10 million) = 107
After microseconds, the next unit of time is milliseconds, which is equal to one thousand microseconds (1 millisecond = 1,000 microseconds). Following milliseconds, the sequence continues with seconds, and then into larger units such as minutes and hours. In the context of smaller fractions of a second, the sequence includes nanoseconds (one billionth of a second) and picoseconds (one trillionth of a second) after microseconds.
In the 8085 class machine, machine cycles are measured in microseconds to nanoseconds. For instance, at a clock frequency of 3 MHz, one clock is 333 nanoseconds, and one memory read or write, without wait states, is one microsecond. One CALL instruction, again without wait states, is 6 microseconds.
473,099,999,999,999,936 nanoseconds.
31,557,600,000,000,000 microseconds are in a millennium.
3.1536E+24 nanoseconds.
There are 86,400,000,000,000 nanoseconds in one day.
There are 1,000,000 microseconds in a second. So, 1 second is equal to 1,000,000 microseconds.
There are 3156000000000000 microseconds in a century