How many hertz is real life?

how many hertz is real life?

Other urls found in this thread:

sciencealert.com/scientists-measure-the-smallest-fragment-of-time-ever-witness-an-electron-escaping-an-atom
wolframalpha.com/input/?i=1 / (planck time)
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

this really hertz

The human eye can only see at 30 fps which is probably caused by the world running at that too. Evolution adjusted our eyes to the frequency of the universe over time

Just overclock your eyes

the amount of times light can change in a second

>2011+6
>not overclocking every body organ

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the real difficulty is syncing

People seizure between 3-30 hertz. So your visual tick rate probably varies and in that area.

Depends what the temperature is.

You want gear that is close to 850 × 10^21 hz gear, because that's what "pro" real life players use competitively right now.

sciencealert.com/scientists-measure-the-smallest-fragment-of-time-ever-witness-an-electron-escaping-an-atom

...

I was reading before few years an article about air force testing limits of human eyes and in their study human eye can see up to 280 frames per sec dont't now is that true ir not can't find the article

288hz displays when

29.97 hz at 800x600

>Overclocking reduces life expectancy

an average human life lasts 39.6 nanohertz

1.855 x 10*43

>that feel when you can tell the difference between 144hz and 240hz and plebs call bullshit.

about 350

10E43 fps

hertz is a measure of frequency, not just time
and 39.6 nanohertz completes a cycle every 292 days, are you saying people are alive for 292 days, then are dead for 292 days (repeating)?

430-700 trillion hertz depending on the type of light

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This.
wolframalpha.com/input/?i=1 / (planck time)

Some real lifes claim to run at higher frequencies, but even scientists can't tell the difference.

23.976

One unit of planck time is roughly 10^-43 seconds, so calculate it yourself

The human eye can only see 32-bit.

Wouldn't every quantum unit of space basically be running asynchronously though? So even if there's a smallest unit of time, that doesn't necessarily mean it's ticking in sync across all space. I mean, time dilation and stuff is a thing, right?

How long is a second?

Planck = 5.391×10^-44 seconds
Hz = Repeating event per unit time
Fuck off with your inconsistent units

Vibration of an atom is typically: 10^13Hz

But it's fucking fun.

1/ 5.391×10^-44

They're perfectly consistent units you inverse-blind mongroid

Time is not synchronised at all. Planck time is merely the smallest possible unit of time.
But really, plank time having a definite value and the relative nature of spacetime is actually one point of contention between general relativity and quantum mechanics.

There's no synced time. Forget about that completely, it's nonsense.
But more important is to realise that every single different rate that time passes is as valid as any other. It's pretty wrong to call them 'different' as they are correct, perfectly so. The paradox that two different and conflicting viewpoints can both be correct is another interesting thing about relativity.

In short, clocks are dumb.

Is planck time even a quantum unit, or just the smallest measurable amount of time? If something was going 90% the speed of light, does it take ~1.1 planck time units to cross 1 planck length, or does it travel 8 planck lengths at 1 planck time unit each then spend 2 planck time units crossing the 9th planck space?

Also seems like if time is a quantum unit, if something were to magically be going faster then light, it'd actually be teleporting and skipping quantums of space every so often instead of passing through all space between two points?

what if my eyes are offset to everyone else's eyes, and I'm seeing something totally different from everyone else?

my brain is probably running at 5 cycles per second

The time it takes the speed of light to cover planck length in one second, if not that probably infinity, you might be able to make an addon to your nervous system that allows sensing more visual information more quickly in one second than the human eye, but how many hertz is the human ear? How many times can you detect someone touching your skin in one second? Put your hand on a vibrating washing machine, or hood of a car or sub woofer and you can tell many differences.

Yes, please have a look in Buddhism.

1/60 minutes
1000 milliseconds

If light travels 300000000m in a second and the smallest distance measurable for light is a planck length, real life is 4.491018e+41hz

real life is at least 240fps

eagle detected

trained jetfighter pilots are indeed able to identify type, weapons and weapons left on an plane after seeing it for 1/250s.
Humans are however even able to detect change up to 1/1500s although that is the limit and the test subjects were not able to tell what exactly changed, only that a change occured

Clif says the materium pops in and out at about 77 trillion hz

How long is a millisecond?

so its basically steroids and gear

seconds != units per second

or I'll do it in the way you are used to
My shoe is greater than your IQ

all these retardation reminded me of this.

About 1.855e+19 yottahertz.

No you idiot, if you define "frame rate" as 1 planck time per frame, you can trivially compute the "frame rate" of the universe, and that's your hertz.

They obviously mean 8 light-minutes per hour. Which is still 13.333% of the speed of light, so not really plausible. And I don't think that would give us the sun's energy FOREVER, since the Earth absorbs energy and that energy has to come from somewhere. All it would accomplish is keeping that energy a constant distance away from us.

All of them.

Roughly 299 MHz.