1 hour = 3,600 seconds
24 hours = (24 x 3,600) seconds
There 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.
that they are lieing
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.
there are 60 minutes in an hour. So that equals 60. there are 60 seconds in a minute but it flashes every 6 seconds and 6 times 10 = 60. so that means you must do 60 times 10 and get 600 and then times 24 hours because we established that you need 24 hours and theres more but i dont feel like sayin anythin else. It is 72,000
Where there a dot within the circle or the circle blinks.
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!
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.
This is normal on most vehicles.
On average, a person blinks around 15-20 times per minute. Assuming an average of 17 times per minute, this would amount to around 14,280 blinks per day. Over a typical lifespan of 70 years, this would equate to approximately 371 million blinks.
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.
I would use the unit of time, such as seconds or milliseconds, to measure the duration between blinks of the eyes.
Susan Blinks was born in 1957.
Firefly light is a mating signal. Only the males fly - the females are wingless and wait in the grass, answering with blinks of light of their own. They find each other this way in order to mate. ^^