Period = 1/frequency = (1/1,000) = 0.001 second
Frequency = reciprocal of period = 1/P = 1/0.008 = 125 Hz.
Period = 1 / frequency = 1/100 = 0.01 second.
0.02
Period of 0.008 sec = Frequency of (1/0.008) = 125 Hz.
The period of a 1000 Hz signal is the time it takes to complete one cycle or revolution of the signal. The formula to calculate the period from the frequency is: T=frac1f where T is the period in seconds and f is the frequency in Hertz. Plugging in the given frequency of 1000 Hz, we get: T=frac11000 T=0.001 Therefore, the period of a 1000 Hz signal is 0.001 seconds or 1 millisecond. This means that one cycle of the signal repeats every 1 millisecond. You can also use this online calculator to convert between frequency and period.
Period = 1/frequency = (1/1,000) = 0.001 second
The period is the duration of one cycle in a repeating event, so the period T is the reciprocal of the frequency f. T = 1 / f. The period is 0.001 second, that is 1 millisecond.
The frequency would be 0.25 Hz. Frequency is the reciprocal of the period, so if the period is 4 seconds, the frequency is 1 / 4 = 0.25 Hz.
The period of a wave is the inverse of its frequency. Therefore, for a radio wave with a frequency of 880,000,000 Hz, the period can be calculated as 1 / 880,000,000 ≈ 1.136 × 10^-9 seconds.
The period of a 10 Hz wave is 0.1 seconds. Period is defined as the time it takes for one complete cycle of the wave to occur, which is the reciprocal of the frequency. In this case, 1/10 Hz equals 0.1 seconds.
Any frequency greater than 1000 cycles per second "comes after" 1000 Hertz. It could be 1001 Hz, or 1048 Hz, or 20,000 Hz, or 1000.00001 Hz. Or 1,000,050,002 Hz. You get the picture. And frequency greater than 1000 Hz will come after it, whether it is a tiny fraction of a cycle per second, or many multiples of the original frequency.
125 cycles per second or 125 Hz. A wave that has a period of 0.008 seconds has a period of 0.008 seconds per cycle. If you have 0.008 seconds per cycle, you have one cycle per 0.008 seconds. And one cycle per 8/1000 seconds is 1 x 1000 / 8 cycles per second, which is 125 cycles per second. As regards waves, frequency and period are reciprocals. By definition, 1/frequency equals period, and 1/period equals frequency.
Frequency of 1000 Hz. (Wavelength of 300 kilometers.)
Frequency = reciprocal of period = 1/P = 1/0.008 = 125 Hz.
The period of a particle is the inverse of its frequency. Therefore, for a particle with a frequency of 315 Hz, the period can be calculated as 1/315 Hz, which equals 0.00317 seconds.
The frequency of a wave is the reciprocal of its period. So, if the period of the wave is 5 seconds, the frequency would be 1/5 Hz, which is 0.2 Hz.