Convert Radians per second (rad/s) to Gigahertz (GHz)
Enter a value below to convert Radians per second (rad/s) to Gigahertz (GHz).
Conversion:
1 Radians per second (rad/s) = 1.5915494309e-10 Gigahertz (GHz)
How to Convert Radians per second (rad/s) to Gigahertz (GHz)
1 radps = 1.5915494309e-10 ghz
1 ghz = 6283185307.2 radps
Example: convert 15 Radians per second (rad/s) to Gigahertz (GHz):
25 radps = 3.9788735773e-9 ghz
Radians per second (rad/s) to Gigahertz (GHz) Conversion Table
| Radians per second (rad/s) | Gigahertz (GHz) |
|---|---|
| 0.01 radps | 1.5915494309e-12 ghz |
| 0.1 radps | 1.5915494309e-11 ghz |
| 1 radps | 1.5915494309e-10 ghz |
| 2 radps | 3.1830988618e-10 ghz |
| 3 radps | 4.7746482928e-10 ghz |
| 5 radps | 7.9577471546e-10 ghz |
| 10 radps | 1.5915494309e-9 ghz |
| 20 radps | 3.1830988618e-9 ghz |
| 50 radps | 7.9577471546e-9 ghz |
| 100 radps | 1.5915494309e-8 ghz |
| 1000 radps | 1.5915494309e-7 ghz |
Radians per second (rad/s)
Definition
Radians per second (rad/s) is the SI unit of angular velocity, measuring the rate of rotation in radians. One full rotation equals 2π rad/s, which corresponds to approximately 6.2832 rad/s.
History
Radians per second emerged from the mathematical definition of the radian in the 18th century. It became the preferred unit in physics and engineering because it simplifies formulas involving rotational dynamics and wave mechanics.
Current use
Radians per second is the standard angular velocity unit in physics, mechanical engineering, control systems, and signal processing. It is used in motor specifications, oscillation analysis, and rotational dynamics calculations.
Gigahertz (GHz)
Definition
A gigahertz (GHz) is a unit of frequency equal to 1,000,000,000 hertz (one billion cycles per second).
History
The gigahertz became common in the late 1990s and early 2000s as computer processor clock speeds surpassed 1 GHz. It also gained importance with the expansion of microwave and satellite communication systems.
Current use
Gigahertz is the standard unit for modern computer processor speeds, Wi-Fi frequencies (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands), 5G cellular networks, radar systems, and satellite communications.