A tenth of a millisecond can be written as 0.1 milliseconds. In scientific notation, it can also be expressed as (1 \times 10^{-4}) seconds. Alternatively, you could use microseconds, where a tenth of a millisecond equals 100 microseconds.
1 tenth
Three and one tenth.
1.4 = 140 %. Rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, that would be 140.0%
I think it would be .4160 but you will have to double check!
a tenth of a percent = 1/10 * 1% = 0.1%
1 tenth
One tenth.
Three and one tenth.
15.1
Four and one tenth.
No, a lower millisecond value indicates faster performance, as it represents the time taken for a process to complete. Conversely, a higher millisecond value would mean a slower performance.
2810000 is already rounded to the nearest tenth. If you need to show that it is rounded to the nearest tenth you would need to write it as 2810000.0
The clock measured the time in milliseconds as the car sped past in a blur.
1.4 = 140 %. Rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, that would be 140.0%
Nanoseconds come after seconds. One nanosecond is equal to one billionth of a second, while one millisecond is equal to one thousandth of a second.
The acronym for a millisecond is 'ms'.
A nanosecond is faster than a millisecond. One millisecond is equal to 1,000,000 nanoseconds.