What is minute?

A minute is a unit of time equal to 60 seconds. It is universally used for scheduling, cooking, fitness tracking, and expressing short durations in everyday life.

Real-world uses

Minutes structure daily life through meeting schedules, cooking times, exercise intervals, and transportation timetables. Medical professionals measure heart rate in beats per minute and respiratory rate in breaths per minute.

History

The minute comes from the Latin "pars minuta prima" (first small part), referring to the first division of the hour into 60 parts. This sexagesimal division originated with the ancient Babylonians around 2000 BCE.

Common mistakes

Using "m" as an abbreviation for minutes, which conflicts with metres. The correct abbreviation is "min." Also, performing arithmetic on time without accounting for the base-60 system (e.g., 1.5 hours is 1 hour 30 minutes, not 1 hour 50 minutes).

What is nanosecond?

A nanosecond is a unit of time equal to one billionth of a second. It is critical in computer processor timing, high-frequency trading, optical communications, and physics experiments.

Real-world uses

Nanoseconds are used in computing to measure memory access times (DRAM latency is typically 10–100 ns), CPU cache operations, and network packet timestamps. Light travels approximately 30 cm in one nanosecond, a fact used in signal timing.

History

The nanosecond became a practical unit with the advent of digital electronics in the 1960s. Grace Hopper famously used a 30 cm piece of wire to demonstrate the distance light travels in a nanosecond, making the concept tangible for non-engineers.

Common mistakes

Underestimating how short a nanosecond is—light only travels about one foot in a nanosecond. Also, confusing nanoseconds with microseconds in performance specifications, which differ by a factor of 1,000.

When is this conversion used?

Converting minute to nanosecond is useful in the time domain when comparing values across different measurement standards or applying formulas that require a specific unit.

Worked examples

1 minute = 6.000000e+10 nanosecond

1 nanosecond = 1.000000e-09 second

How to convert minute to nanosecond

To convert minute to nanosecond, multiply the value by 6.000000e+10.

To convert nanosecond back to minute, multiply by 1.666667e-11.

Measurement standards

The SI second is defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom, maintained by the BIPM and national metrology institutes worldwide.

Did you know?

Earth's rotation is gradually slowing due to tidal friction with the Moon. To keep atomic time aligned with solar time, "leap seconds" have been inserted 27 times since 1972 — though they are scheduled to be abolished by 2035.

Quick reference: minute to nanosecond

minutenanosecond
0.16.000000e+09
0.53.000000e+10
16.000000e+10
21.200000e+11
53.000000e+11
106.000000e+11
251.500000e+12
503.000000e+12
1006.000000e+12
2501.500000e+13
5003.000000e+13
1,0006.000000e+13

Common values

minutenanosecond
Blink of an eye0.005 minute300,000,000 nanosecond
Average pop song3.5 minute2.100000e+11 nanosecond
Feature film120 minute7.200000e+12 nanosecond
One work day (8 hrs)480 minute2.880000e+13 nanosecond
One calendar year525,600 minute3.153600e+16 nanosecond