There are less than a hundred thousand seconds in a day. If you blink once every five seconds, you'd blink about 17,000 times a day. In actual practice, it would probably be closer to 12,000, since you don't really blink while you're sleeping. So: quite a bit less than a hundred thousand.
If you didn't sleep, you'd blink more than a hundred thousand times in a week. Probably a lot more, since towards the end of the week you'd most likely be blinking much more often than once every five seconds.
1 day = 24 hours = 24 x 60 = 1440 minutes 60 seconds = 1 minute : But as the blink rate is 1 every 5 seconds then during each minute the eye blinks 60 ÷ 5 = 12 times. Therefore the number of blinks in 1 day = 1440 x 12 = 17280 which is much less than 100000.
You have three for every hundred and you have two thousand hundreds...
Well, honey, if you do the math, blinking once every five seconds adds up to about 17,280 blinks in a 24-hour day. So, no, it's definitely less than 100,000 blinks per day. You might wanna keep those peepers hydrated and give 'em a break every now and then!
1400 Fourteen hundred 1400,000 Fourteen hundred thousand. Ir more clearly written as 1,400,000 , which is ' One Million four hundred thousand'. Note the use of commas at every third digit.
There are four zeros in four hundred thousand. This can be determined by recognizing that the number four hundred thousand is written as 400,000, with four zeros following the digit 4. Each zero represents a placeholder for a power of 10, indicating the magnitude of the number.
60 seconds divided by 5 seconds = 12 blinks per minute x 60 minutes = 720 blinks per hour x 24 hours = 17280 blinks per day so the answer is LESS than 100,000 times.
1 day = 24 hours = 24 x 60 = 1440 minutes 60 seconds = 1 minute : But as the blink rate is 1 every 5 seconds then during each minute the eye blinks 60 ÷ 5 = 12 times. Therefore the number of blinks in 1 day = 1440 x 12 = 17280 which is much less than 100000.
You have three for every hundred and you have two thousand hundreds...
This is normal on most vehicles.
To find how many times the two lights blink at the same time in 60 seconds, we need to determine the least common multiple (LCM) of their blinking intervals: 4 seconds and 6 seconds. The LCM of 4 and 6 is 12 seconds. In 60 seconds, the lights will blink together every 12 seconds, resulting in 60 / 12 = 5 times they will blink simultaneously.
Well, honey, if you do the math, blinking once every five seconds adds up to about 17,280 blinks in a 24-hour day. So, no, it's definitely less than 100,000 blinks per day. You might wanna keep those peepers hydrated and give 'em a break every now and then!
1 hour = 3,600 seconds24 hours = (24 x 3,600) secondsThere are (24 x 3,600/6) periods of 6 seconds in 24 hours.In that many periods of 6 seconds, there are (24 x 3,600 x 5/6) blinks = 72,000 blinks.
1400 Fourteen hundred 1400,000 Fourteen hundred thousand. Ir more clearly written as 1,400,000 , which is ' One Million four hundred thousand'. Note the use of commas at every third digit.
One hundred thousand
2,700 photos were being taken every second,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
every hundred thousand miles
12 blinks per minute