Yes.
To convert seconds to hertz, you would take the reciprocal of the time in seconds. For example, if you have 1 second, the frequency in hertz would be 1 Hz (1/1). If you have 0.5 seconds, the frequency would be 2 Hz (1/0.5).
The length of time for the second half-life is the same as the first half-life. Each half-life represents the time it takes for half of the radioactive atoms in a sample to decay. This process continues exponentially with each subsequent half-life.
To convert seconds to nanoseconds, you would multiply the number of seconds by 1,000,000,000 (since 1 second is equal to 1,000,000,000 nanoseconds). For example, 1 second would be equal to 1,000,000,000 nanoseconds.
there is no real metric unit. The SI unit is the second
No. Some only last a tiny fraction of a second, some last hundreds of thousands of years.
The clock lost 32 seconds in 32 hours ie 1 second per hour. So in half an hour it would have lost half a second.
Seconds and seconds have the same magnitude, so a value in seconds is already a value in seconds.
same question
No
The same as 4.7 seconds.
The first half is 5.5 inches. The second half is the same.
Yes.
300 x 10 x 2 = 6000 The plane will travel 6000 feet.
20 feet in 0,5 seconds ==> 40 feet per second 40 feet per second * 3 seconds = 120 feet
The dad is 5.5 feet tall.
55 meters in 6.47 seconds would be the same as 60 yards in 6.454 seconds.
Yes, usually. Most minutes have 60 seconds; although now and then a leap second is added.