T itleA xisI ntervalsL abelS cale
It goes like this: kilo, mega, giga. We use kilo for 103, mega for 106 and giga for 109.
Factor Name Symbol1024 yotta Y1021 zetta Z1018 exa E1015 peta P1012 tera T109 giga G106 mega M103 kilo k102 hecto h101 deca da10-1 deci d10-2 centi c10-3 milli m10-6 micro µ10-9 nano n10-12 pico p10-15 femto f10-18 atto a10-21 zepto z10-24 yocto y
When using SI prefixes like mega, giga, and kilo, they represent multiples of a base unit. Mega represents one million times, giga represents one billion times, and kilo represents one thousand times. They are used to indicate measurements in various fields like data storage, telecommunications, and physics.
Some common electrical prefixes include milli- (m), which represents one thousandth (10^-3), micro- (μ) for one millionth (10^-6), kilo- (k) for one thousand (10^3), and mega- (M) for one million (10^6). These prefixes are used to express different orders of magnitude in electrical measurements.
well the list of prefixes are as following in the "10 system" (metric length and so on) deka- hecto- kilo- giga- tera- peta- exa- zetta- yotta- In the binary system (bytes, hertz) deka and hecto are not used. So after gigahertz is terahertz then petahertz and so on Only missed "mega-" in the listed base 10 order of power. It goes ...kilo- mega- giga-... deka = 10 hecto = 100 kilo = 1,000 mega = 1,000,000 giga = 1,000,000,000 tera = 1,000,000,000,000 etc.
yotta- zetta- exa- peta- tera- giga- mega- kilo- hecto- deca- deci- centi- milli- micro- nano- pico- femto- atto- zepto- yocto-
giga (1,000,000,000) mega (1,000,000) kilo (1,000) hecto (100) deka (10) deci (a tenth) centi ( a hundredth) milli (a thousandth) micro (a millionth) nano (a thousand millionth)
meter (m), kilogram (kg), second (s), kelvin (K), and mole (mol) Prefixes: yotta, zetta, exa, peta, tera, giga, mega, kilo, hecto, deka, deci, centi, milli, micro, nano, pico, femto, atto, zepto, yocto
if the base is 100, Dekka is 101, Hecto is 102, Kilo is 103 and there are many more including giga and mega
Since you didn't provide us with a list, here's one from least to greatest: Kilo, mega, giga, tera, peta, exa, zetta, yotta.
T itleA xisI ntervalsL abelS cale
Tera = 1,000,000,000,000 units Giga = 1,000,000,000 units Mega = 1,000,000 units kilo = 1,000 units hecto = 100 units deca = 10 units deci = 1/10 unit centi = 1/100 unit milli = 1/1,000 unit micro= 1/1,000,000 unit nano = 1/1,000,000,000 unit pico = 1/1,000,000,000,000 unit
It goes like this: kilo, mega, giga. We use kilo for 103, mega for 106 and giga for 109.
Tera (T) Giga (G) Mega (M) Kilo (k) Hecto (h) Deka (da) Deci (d) Centi (c) Milli (m) Micro (μ) Nano (n) Pico (p) Femto (f) Atto (a)
Some common prefixes used for computers are "micro-" (e.g., microprocessor), "multi-" (e.g., multitasking), "bi-" (e.g., binary), and "tele-" (e.g., teletype). These prefixes help provide information about the computer's functionality or components.
No, it is 1 billion. Remember, you have kilo, mega then giga