How to Convert Terahertz to Kilohertz
To convert a frequency measurement from terahertz to kilohertz, multiply the frequency value by the conversion factor. Since one terahertz is equal to 109 kilohertz, you can use this formula:
The frequency in kilohertz is equal to the terahertz multiplied by 109.
Using the formula: kilohertz = terahertz × 109
kilohertz = 5 THz × 109 = 5.0000E+9 kHz
Therefore, 5 terahertz equals 5.0000E+9 kilohertz.
How Many Kilohertz Are in a Terahertz?
There are 109 kilohertz in one terahertz.
What Is a Terahertz?
The terahertz (symbol: THz) is a unit of frequency equal to one trillion (1012) hertz. The prefix “tera” denotes a factor of 1012 in the International System of Units. Terahertz radiation (also called T-rays) occupies the electromagnetic spectrum between microwave and infrared radiation, spanning roughly 0.1–10 THz (wavelengths of 3 mm to 30 μm). This region is sometimes called the “terahertz gap” because it has historically been difficult to generate and detect. Terahertz imaging is used in airport security scanners, as THz radiation can penetrate clothing, paper, and plastics but is reflected by metals and absorbed by water. This allows concealed objects to be detected without using ionising radiation (X-rays). In astronomy, far-infrared and sub-millimetre telescopes observe at terahertz frequencies to study cold dust clouds, molecular gas in galaxies, and the cosmic microwave background. In materials science, terahertz spectroscopy is used to study the vibrational modes of molecules and crystal lattices.
One terahertz is equal to:
- 1012 hertz (Hz)
- 109 kilohertz (kHz)
- 106 megahertz (MHz)
- 1,000 gigahertz (GHz)
- 6 × 1013 RPM
- 6.28319 × 1012 radians per second (rad/s)
What Is a Kilohertz?
The kilohertz (symbol: kHz) is a unit of frequency equal to one thousand (103) hertz. The prefix “kilo” denotes a factor of 1,000 in the International System of Units. Kilohertz frequencies are encountered in audio engineering, AM radio broadcasting, and ultrasonic applications. The full range of human hearing (20 Hz to 20,000 Hz) is often expressed as 0.02–20 kHz. Audio sampling rates are commonly 44.1 kHz (CD quality) or 48 kHz (professional audio). In radio broadcasting, the AM (amplitude modulation) band spans approximately 530–1,700 kHz. Longwave radio operates at 148.5–283.5 kHz, and shortwave radio spans 3–30 MHz (3,000–30,000 kHz). In ultrasonics, frequencies in the tens to hundreds of kilohertz are used for industrial cleaning (20–40 kHz), sonar systems (10–100 kHz), and some medical imaging applications. Pest deterrent devices typically operate in the 15–25 kHz range.
One kilohertz is equal to:
- 1,000 hertz (Hz)
- 1,000 cycles per second (cps)
- 0.001 megahertz (MHz)
- 10−6 gigahertz (GHz)
- 60,000 revolutions per minute (RPM)
- 6,283.19 radians per second (rad/s)
Understanding Frequency Units
Frequency is a physical quantity that measures how often a periodic event occurs per unit of time. In the most common usage, it measures the number of complete cycles of oscillation per second. Frequency is the reciprocal of the period (T): f = 1/T.
Different frequency units have evolved to serve different fields and applications. The hertz and its metric multiples dominate physics and electronics, while RPM is standard in mechanical engineering, and radians per second is preferred in mathematical physics and control theory.
Major Unit Families
- SI / Metric units: The hertz (Hz) is the SI unit of frequency, with standard metric prefixes (kHz, MHz, GHz, THz). Each prefix step is a factor of 1,000.
- Cycles per second: The cycle per second (cps) is the original name for the hertz. It is numerically identical (1 cps = 1 Hz) but predates the adoption of the “hertz” name in 1960.
- Revolutions per minute: RPM measures rotational speed and is widely used in mechanical engineering and everyday life. 1 RPM = 1/60 Hz.
- Angular velocity units: Radians per second (rad/s) and degrees per second (°/s) measure angular velocity. One full revolution = 2π rad = 360°, so 1 Hz = 2π rad/s = 360 °/s.
Frequency in Everyday Life
- Sound: Human hearing ranges from about 20 Hz to 20 kHz. Middle C on a piano is 261.6 Hz. Concert pitch A is 440 Hz.
- Electricity: Mains power alternates at 50 Hz (most of the world) or 60 Hz (Americas, parts of Asia).
- Computing: Modern CPUs run at 2–5 GHz. Monitor refresh rates are 60–360 Hz.
- Radio: AM radio: 530–1,700 kHz. FM radio: 87.5–108 MHz. Wi-Fi: 2.4 / 5 / 6 GHz.
- Rotation: Car engines idle at 600–1,000 RPM. Hard drives spin at 5,400–7,200 RPM.
Converting Between Frequency Units
All frequency units measure the same physical quantity (periodic events per unit time), so converting between them involves multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. The key relationships are:
- 1 Hz = 1 cps (identical units)
- 1 Hz = 60 RPM (one cycle per second = 60 cycles per minute)
- 1 Hz = 2π rad/s ≈ 6.28319 rad/s (one cycle = 2π radians)
- 1 Hz = 360 °/s (one cycle = 360 degrees)
Tips for Frequency Conversions
- For SI metric conversions (Hz, kHz, MHz, GHz, THz), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 GHz = 1,000 MHz = 1,000,000 kHz = 109 Hz.
- Hertz and cycles per second are exactly the same unit (1 Hz = 1 cps). The name “hertz” was adopted in 1960 to honour Heinrich Hertz.
- To convert Hz to RPM, multiply by 60. To convert RPM to Hz, divide by 60.
- To convert Hz to rad/s, multiply by 2π (≈ 6.28319). To convert rad/s to Hz, divide by 2π.
- To convert Hz to °/s, multiply by 360. To convert °/s to Hz, divide by 360.
- To convert RPM to rad/s, multiply by 2π/60 (≈ 0.10472). This is one of the most common conversions in mechanical engineering.
- To convert RPM to °/s, multiply by 6 (since 360° ÷ 60 s = 6 °/s per RPM).
- Remember that frequency (f in Hz) and angular frequency (ω in rad/s) are related by ω = 2πf. Many physics equations use ω rather than f.
Terahertz to Kilohertz Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from terahertz to kilohertz.
| Terahertz | Kilohertz (kHz) |
|---|---|
| 1.0000E-8 THz | 10 |
| 2.0000E-8 THz | 20 |
| 3.0000E-8 THz | 30 |
| 4.0000E-8 THz | 40 |
| 5.0000E-8 THz | 50 |
| 6.0000E-8 THz | 60 |
| 7.0000E-8 THz | 70 |
| 8.0000E-8 THz | 80 |
| 9.0000E-8 THz | 90 |
| 1.0000E-7 THz | 100 |
| 2.0000E-7 THz | 200 |
| 3.0000E-7 THz | 300 |
| 4.0000E-7 THz | 400 |
| 5.0000E-7 THz | 500 |
| 6.0000E-7 THz | 600 |
| 7.0000E-7 THz | 700 |
| 8.0000E-7 THz | 800 |
| 9.0000E-7 THz | 900 |
| 1.0000E-6 THz | 1,000 |
| 2.0000E-6 THz | 2,000 |
| 3.0000E-6 THz | 3,000 |
| 4.0000E-6 THz | 4,000 |
| 5.0000E-6 THz | 5,000 |
| 6.0000E-6 THz | 6,000 |
| 7.0000E-6 THz | 7,000 |
| 8.0000E-6 THz | 8,000 |
| 9.0000E-6 THz | 9,000 |
| 1.0000E-5 THz | 10,000 |