No, a millisecond is not half of a second. A millisecond is 1000th of a second. The prefix milli comes from the metric system and by definition means 1000th of the base unit (in this case seconds).
One thousandth of a second is a millisecond. Ten milliseconds = 1/100th of a second. Also called a 'centisecond'.
A microsecond, which is 1,000 times smaller than a millisecond. A nanosecond, which is one-millionth of a millisecond (one-billionth of a second). A picosecond, which is one-billionth of a millisecond (one-trillionth of a second). This is also the shortest period of time that is currently accurately measurable.
A millisecond is a thousandth (1/1,000) of a second.
A millisecond is one thousandth of a second.
yes
The millisecond is a unit of time, not a unit of speed.100 milliseconds is 100 times longer than one millisecond.
Zero. "Millisecond" is a unit of time. "Light year" is a unit of distance. The question is equivalent to asking how many minutes there are in ten miles.
I think it is Planck time if yall know what that is-
No, a millisecond is not half of a second. A millisecond is 1000th of a second. The prefix milli comes from the metric system and by definition means 1000th of the base unit (in this case seconds).
The SI unit for time is the second. Other units include fractions of a second, such as millisecond or microsecond; as well as minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years.
All and any moment of time that's shorter than a millisecond.
"Year" is a unit of time. Any quantity of years can be converted to an equivalent quantity in any other unit of time. The conversion factor depends on the new unit. Some other units of time are: -- femtosecond -- nanosecond -- millisecond -- second -- minute -- hour -- day -- fortnight
.000001 seconds, or 1X 10 to the negative 6 seconds. This is a common unit of time measurement used in electronics, where an operation can be performed thousands of times in one second. one millionth of a second
A millesecond is a measure of time. Computers can measure one millisecond easily.
Chronemics dictate globally what is the exact time of the world down to the last millisecond.
The SI unit of time is the second. Other units include (of course) millisecond, microsecond, etc.; for larger lengths of time, the traditional time system is usually used, with units such as minute, hour, day, week, month, year, decade, century, millennium.