Millisecond
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A millisecond (from milli- and second; symbol: ms) is a thousandth (0.001 or 10−3 or 1/1000) of a second.[1]
10 milliseconds (a hundredth of a second) are called a centisecond.
100 milliseconds (one tenth of a second) are called a decisecond.
To help compare orders of magnitude of different times, this page lists times between 10−3 seconds and 100 seconds (1 millisecond and one second). See also times of other orders of magnitude.
Examples
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- 1 millisecond (1 ms) — cycle time for frequency 1 kHz; duration of light for typical photo flash strobe; time taken for sound wave to travel ca. 34 cm; repetition interval of GPS C/A PN code
- 1.000692286 milliseconds — time taken for light to travel 300 km in a vacuum
- 2 milliseconds to 5 milliseconds - typical response time in LCD computer monitors, especially high-end displays
- 2.27 milliseconds — cycle time for A440 (pitch standard), the most commonly used pitch for tuning musical instruments
- 3 milliseconds — a housefly's wing flap
- 3.3 milliseconds — normal delay time between initiation and detonation of a C4 explosive charge
- 4 milliseconds — typical average seek time for a 10,000 rpm hard disk
- 5 milliseconds — a honey bee's wing flap
- 5 milliseconds to 80 milliseconds — a hummingbird's wing flap
- 8 milliseconds — 1/125 of a second, a standard camera shutter speed (125); fastest shifting time of a car's mechanical transmission
- 10 milliseconds (10 ms) — a jiffy, cycle time for frequency 100 Hz
- 15.625 milliseconds — a two hundred fifty-sixth note at 60 BPM
- 16.67 milliseconds (1/60 second) — a third, cycle time for American 60 Hz AC electricity (mains grid)
- 16.68 milliseconds (1/59.94 second) — the amount of time one field lasts in 29.97 fps interlaced video (commonly erroneously referred to as 30 fps)
- 20 milliseconds — cycle time for European 50 Hz AC electricity
- 31.25 milliseconds — a hundred twenty-eighth note at 60 BPM
- 33.367 milliseconds — the amount of time one frame lasts in 29.97 fps video (most common for NTSC-legacy formats)
- 41.667 milliseconds — the amount of time one frame lasts in 24 fps video (most common cinematic frame rate)
- 41.708 milliseconds — the amount of time one frame lasts in 23.976 fps video (cinematic frame rate for NTSC-legacy formats)
- 50 milliseconds — the time interval between gear changes on a Lamborghini Aventador
- 50 milliseconds — cycle time for the lowest audible tone, 20 Hz
- 60 milliseconds — cycle time for European 16.7 Hz AC electrified railroad power grid
- 60 milliseconds — the time interval between gear changes on a Ferrari 458 Spider
- 62.5 milliseconds — a sixty-fourth note at 60 BPM
- 5 to 80 milliseconds — typical latency for a broadband internet connection (important for playing online games)
- 100 milliseconds — the time interval between gear changes on a Ferrari FXX
- 125 milliseconds — a thirty-second note at 60 BPM
- 134 milliseconds — time taken by light to travel around the Earth's equator
- 150 milliseconds — recommended maximum time delay for telephone service
- 185 milliseconds — the duration of a full rotation of the main rotor on Bell 205, 212 and 412 helicopters (normal rotor speed is 324 RPM)
- 200 milliseconds — the time it takes the human brain to recognize emotion in facial expressions
- 250 milliseconds — a sixteenth note at 60 BPM
- 300 to 400 milliseconds — the time for the human eye to blink
- 400 milliseconds — time in which the fastest baseball pitches reach the strike zone
- 430 to 500 milliseconds — common modern dance music tempos (120–140 BPM)
- 495 milliseconds — an approximate average of the round trip time for communications via geosynchronous satellites
- 500 milliseconds — an eighth note at 60 BPM
- 860 milliseconds — average human resting heart cycle time
- 1000 milliseconds — one second; the period of a 1 Hz oscillator
- 86,400,000 (24 × 60 × 60 × 1000) milliseconds — one day
- 31,556,908,800 (86,400,000 × 365.242) milliseconds — one year
Half-lives
For a list half-lives in this timescale, see: List of isotopes by half-life
See also
References
- ↑ New Oxford Dictionary
External links
Look up millisecond in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |