Definition of Nanoseconds

1. Noun. (plural of nanosecond) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Nanoseconds

1. nanosecond [n] - See also: nanosecond

Lexicographical Neighbors of Nanoseconds

nanosats
nanoscale
nanoscaled
nanoscales
nanoscience
nanosciences
nanoscientific
nanoscientist
nanoscientists
nanoscope
nanoscopic
nanoscopy
nanoscroll
nanoscrolls
nanosecond
nanoseconds (current term)
nanoselective
nanosensing
nanosensor
nanosensors
nanosheet
nanosheets
nanoshell
nanoshells
nanosiemens
nanosilver
nanosize
nanosized
nanoslit
nanoslits

Literary usage of Nanoseconds

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Remote Sensing & Ecosystem Management: Proceedings of the Fifth Forest edited by Jerry D Greer (1998)
"Ionospheric delays for a satellite directly overhead normally range from a few nanoseconds (one nanosecond is about one foot of light travel) to 50 ..."

2. 3-D Deterministic Radiation Transport Computer Programs: Features by OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (1997)
"... nanoseconds on the 512 PE (Processing Element) T3D, as opposed to typical grind times of 150-200 nanoseconds on a 2048 PE CM-200 or 300-400 nanoseconds ..."

3. The Metric System (1992)
"Since 1969 it has been possible to compare these various instruments, over intercontinental distances, with uncertainties of only a few hundred nanoseconds. ..."

4. Bmdo Technology And The Electric Utility Industry by DIANE Publishing Company (1997)
"Short (less than 100 nanoseconds) pulse lengths and high energies (100 ... Also, short pulse rise times of less than 10 nanoseconds and the ability to ..."

5. An Assessment Of Potential Health Effects From Exposure To Pave Paws Low by Brer, National Research Council (U.S.) (2005)
"The delay time across the array is roughly 74 nanoseconds; the delay for the worst case mentioned above is nanoseconds. In order to get a fine-grain picture ..."

6. A Physicist's Labour in War and Peace: Memoirs 1933-1999 by E. Walter Kellermann (2004)
"Yukawa had calculated that the decay time of the pion should be of the order of nanoseconds. The decay time is about one hundredth of that of the muon so ..."

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