Yes.
1 Hertz (Hz.) = 1 cycle per second
Units are 1/seconds = sec^-1
Yes; nominclature was changed to honor Mr Hertz. It is still Cycles @ Second regardless.
50. Hertz is the same as cycles per second.
Frequency is no longer measured in cycles per second. It is now measured using the unit 'hertz' (abbreviation Hz). However, one hertz is exactly the same thing as one cycle per second.
Hertz is a unit of measuring frequency. It is 'cycles per second' or just second^-1 or 1/seconds. It is not the same as seconds (a measure of time or elapsed time).
The hertz, named after Heinrich Hertz, is a measure of frequency. It means cycles per second. In mathematical terminology its 1/s or s^-1. Giga is the same standard SI prefix meaning 10^9. So 1 gigahertz is 1,000,000,000 (cycles) per second. The FCC has a 'hole' in the frequency spectrum opened up for 'free range' use around 2.4 GHz. This is why most all modern devices you see operate in this range. A good general overview of frequencies is over at wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hertz
There is nothing to convert. You are using the same unit of measurement. A hertz is a hertz, all you are dealing with is 10 less Hertz. 60 Hertz - 10 Hertz = 50 Hertz The difference is 10 Hertz. The math there is just to give you a clear example and illustrate my point. What you are asking for is similar to someone asking "how do you convert miles to miles" or "how do I convert inches to inches".
Cycles per second = Hertz. In other words they are the same.
Frequency. Hertz is the same as cycles per second.
50. Hertz is the same as cycles per second.
Frequency. The number of Hertz is the same as the number of cycles per second.
Kilo means thousand, and hertz is the same as cycle per second. Therefore, a kilohertz is the same as 1000 cycles per second.
Yes. 'Hertz' is the new name ... as of the past 20 years or so ... given to the quantity that used to be know as 'cycles per second' or simply 'cycles'. 'Hertz' has the same dimensions as 'cycles' = T -1 (reciprocal time).
Hertz is the present-day name for the measurement once called cycles per second. They're the same thing.
Frequency is no longer measured in cycles per second. It is now measured using the unit 'hertz' (abbreviation Hz). However, one hertz is exactly the same thing as one cycle per second.
No! 300 Megahertz is equal to 300 MILLION cycles per second. The unit "Hertz" is defined as cycles per second, and the prefix "Mega" means millions.
Hertz is a unit of measuring frequency. It is 'cycles per second' or just second^-1 or 1/seconds. It is not the same as seconds (a measure of time or elapsed time).
1 hertz is the same as 1 cycle per second. Waves have vibrations, or something else that changes over time, and the frequency - measured in hertz - specifies how many full cycles occur in one second. For example, if a water wave has 1 cycle per second (1 hertz), that would mean that at any given point, the water moves up and down once per second.
Hertz (Hz) means the unit of cycles per second (1/T). It has to do with the frequency.Decibel (dB) is a logarithmic unit of measurement that expresses the magnitude of a physical quantity.Since it is a ratio of two quantities with the same unit, it is a dimensionless unit. Both have nothing to do with each other. It is totally different, like cars and bananas.Decibels is a ratio and hertz means cycles per second. The difference is like between bananas and apples.