The period of an 8000 Hz sine wave is 0.125 milliseconds. (1/8000)
The period of a 15MHz sine wave is 1 / 15MHz, or 0.066667 us, or 66 2/3 ns.
10 Hz
The period of 1 MHz is 1 microsecond. The waveform is irrelevant.
Frequency = 1 / period = 1 / 0.807 = 1.2392 Hz (rounded)
The period of an 8000 Hz sine wave is 0.125 milliseconds. (1/8000)
The period of a 15MHz sine wave is 1 / 15MHz, or 0.066667 us, or 66 2/3 ns.
The period is 1 millisecond.
10 Hz
It is 1/810,000 = 0.00000123456790123456790... recurring.
Period = 1 / frequency = 1/272 = 0.003676 second (rounded)
1 divided by 100,000,000.00 in sec
the length of time it takes to complete one cycle
The period is the reciprocal of the frequency, in this case, 1/250 second.
The period of 1 MHz is 1 microsecond. The waveform is irrelevant.
The period of a sine wave is the reciprocal of the frequency. So, if the time period is 2.5 microseconds, the frequency would be 1 / 2.5 microseconds, which is 400 kHz.
The time it takes for a sine wave to complete one cycle is called the period. It is typically denoted by the symbol T and is the inverse of the frequency of the wave.