One thousandth of a second is a millisecond. Ten milliseconds = 1/100th of a second. Also called a 'centisecond'.
Since a centimeter is 100th of a meter, it would be traveling at .09 meters per second. 100th of a second, 100th of a meter, the relationship is 1. meters per second.
To express 100th of a second in scientific notation, we write it as 1 x 10^-2 seconds.
1 1/100th
No, 1/100th of a mile is 52.8 feet. 1/10th would be 528 feet and 1 mile is 5280 feet.
Actually, it is only 1/100th a second to a company who makes instant noodles. A jiffy is a 1/60 of a second. A centisecond is 1/100 of a second.
a jiffy is a 100th of a second. Correction: a jiffy is 16.7 milliseconds, approximately 1/60th of a second. In computers, a jiffy is 55 ms (1/18 sec). This is the length of a time sharing block of time on DOS and Windows computers.
I will be back in a jiffy.However, that's a bit of an exaggeration, as a jiffy is 1/100th of a second.
Planck time, which is around 10^-44 seconds.
It's the length of time it takes for "one tick" of the system timer interrupt. This is basically determined by the system clock speed, but there are some other factors that will affect the actual duration of the "jiffy" in this application.
It is 1/100 of a second
You have to blink when your supposed to blink and when you blink it happens in a jiffy. A jiffy is 1 out of a hundred of a second.
One thousandth of a second is a millisecond. Ten milliseconds = 1/100th of a second. Also called a 'centisecond'.
Since a centimeter is 100th of a meter, it would be traveling at .09 meters per second. 100th of a second, 100th of a meter, the relationship is 1. meters per second.
To express 100th of a second in scientific notation, we write it as 1 x 10^-2 seconds.
Oh, dude, one hundredth of a second is like a tiny, minuscule fraction of time. It's basically 0.01 seconds, which is like a blink-and-you'll-miss-it kind of deal. So yeah, it's like super fast, but also not that big of a deal in the grand scheme of things.
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