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.
20 feet in 0,5 seconds ==> 40 feet per second 40 feet per second * 3 seconds = 120 feet
300 x 10 x 2 = 6000 The plane will travel 6000 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.