THANK YOU!!! this topic's been incorporated into my ap chem's unit 1 (before the explanation of electron orbitals, might i add!) and this explanation is so easy to understand.
I have a question on 8:49 time stamp, when you did 1340*10^3 for the frequency, wouldnt that mean you are using MegaHertz for the unit rather than hertz? Correct me if i am wrong but i thought it would be 1340*10^-3 to get the correct unit for Hz
The unit in the problem is given in kilohertz, and kilo means 1000 (or 10^3) of something. So 1340 kilohertz is the same as 1340 x 10^3 hertz. Or if you want to make the complete conversion, 1.34 x 10^6 Hz.
THANK YOU!!! this topic's been incorporated into my ap chem's unit 1 (before the explanation of electron orbitals, might i add!) and this explanation is so easy to understand.
I'm so glad it was helpful. Thanks for watching, and best wishes on your first unit!
thanks jeremy🙏🙏
You're welcome!
I have a question on 8:49 time stamp, when you did 1340*10^3 for the frequency, wouldnt that mean you are using MegaHertz for the unit rather than hertz? Correct me if i am wrong but i thought it would be 1340*10^-3 to get the correct unit for Hz
The unit in the problem is given in kilohertz, and kilo means 1000 (or 10^3) of something. So 1340 kilohertz is the same as 1340 x 10^3 hertz. Or if you want to make the complete conversion, 1.34 x 10^6 Hz.
You are saving me I wish your videos are Ted more detailed
Thanks for watching and for your kind words!