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No. "Simple harmonic motion" is motion in a single dimension; it can be represented as the projection of a uniform circular motion.
It is motion that is confined a single direction. That being said you can also expand it to include motion along a single line such as when a bead moves along a curved wire.
It helps to think of dimensions as directions of movement. One-dimensional motion, therefore, is motion in a single direction - in other words, just a straight line.
The time required for a single vibration (back and forth motion).
A single fixed pulley is a simple machine that only changes the direction of the force applied, not the amount. An example is the pulley in window blinds.
Single bonds to carbon are usually freely rotational, but double and triple bonds usually are not. Rotation can also be hindered by steric factors; the carbon-carbon single bonds in cyclopropane, for example, are not freely rotational because of the constraint of the cyclic structure.
No. "Simple harmonic motion" is motion in a single dimension; it can be represented as the projection of a uniform circular motion.
Rotational symmetry refers to symmetry of the figure when it is rotated about a single point in the same plane. Lines of symmetry apply to reflections. You do not have lines of rotational symmetry.
It is motion that is confined a single direction. That being said you can also expand it to include motion along a single line such as when a bead moves along a curved wire.
motion diagram
motion diagram
jocularly applied to the unmarried state
A linear stage does limit the single axis of motion significantly. This is because if the stage is only linear it only goes in a straight line and therefore has a smaller range of motion.
kinnertone
motion
No, if you want proof every single earthquake that happens every single day is a product of the continental plates being in motion and the dynamics associated with that motion.
no