1080-600 = 480
4/9
The Highest Common Factor (HCF) of 480 and 1080 is the largest positive integer that divides both numbers without leaving a remainder. To find the HCF, we need to factorize both numbers into their prime factors. The prime factors of 480 are 2^5 x 3 x 5, and the prime factors of 1080 are 2^3 x 3^3 x 5. To find the HCF, we take the common prime factors with the lowest exponent, which are 2^3 x 3 = 24. Therefore, the HCF of 480 and 1080 is 24.
120, 240, 360, 480, 600, 720, 840, 960, 1080, 1200, 1320, . . .
120, 240, 360, 480, 600, 720, 840, 960, 1080, 1200, 1320, . . .
For every 20 gallons you travel 480 miles. With 45 gallons it is: 480 for 20 gal 480 for 20 gal 120 for 5 gal --------------------------- 1080 miles for 45 gallons
The multiples of 120 are an infinite set that starts with 120, 240, 360, 480, 600, 720, 840, 960, 1080, 1200, and so on.
well i think it maybe .......................... 10, but im not sure if its correct please edit if its wrong :)
480 refers to standard definition television signals in North America and it the number of lines that make up the image. (In Europe, 576 lines is the standard definition resolution). 1080 is the number of lines that make up a high definition television signal (720 is another high definition format although less commonly used). Up converters are used to allow 480 signals to be used on 1080 displays or to mix them into other 1080 content during production. The up converter takes a 480 line image and outputs the same image at 1080 lines. They are sometimes used in DVD players and other source equipment to allow standard definition material to share the same format as HD material. SD DVD players that have the feature will normally boast of a 1080 output or HD output. Do not be fooled: SD material that has been up converted will be in HD format but it is absolutely NOT HD quality. The amount of information in and SD signal is about 20% of a true HD signal. Up converting cannot add the extra detail so do not expect up converted material to look like HD.
no it wont, a upconvert DVD player will only upscale DVDs and not interfere with normal tv.
Video that is output via the HDMI terminal is up-converted to 1080p when played on compatible televisions. The video shot is still recorded at 1080/60i, but it is simply up-converted to 1080p during the output process.
120, 240, 360, 480, 600