A number line is where a line is drawn with one number starting on one end and another ending it. The number on the furthest right or bottom end is the lower number and the number on the furthest left or top is the highest number.
There are an infinite number of points on a line.
It is a concept, not a physical thing. There is no line painted on the ground and ocean to show where the equator is, just as there is no line on the ground to show a state line.
The atomic number. On the symbol, it's the number at the lower left (the markup here won't allow me to show you exactly what I mean, but it's the 6 in 136C... those two numbers should be directly in line).
The intensity of a line is proportional to the number of photons emitted or absorbed by the atoms. It depends on the number of atoms giving rise to the line.
line plot i think...
how do you show 2/5's on a number line
you put a dash where the correct number is.
line plot
line plot
1/4 is equivalent to 0.25 on the number line
First, you calculate it to the desired number of decimals. Then you place it on the number line in the usual manner.
to show how much the number is worth
Using just the number line, the only option is to draw some symbols on the number line wherever a data point is observed. It is not easy to show multiple occurrences on a one-dimensional figure.
I assume you mean the square Root of 3. You can't show it exactly as root 3 is an irrational number. BUT, you can show it approximately. Root 3 = 1.732... So put a mark between 1 and 2 on the number line at about 1.7.
4142539
1_2_3_4_5_6_7_8_9_10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._99_100
This is the number -0.40, so is a little less than halfway from 0 back to -1 ■