alpha decay
Beta Decay
Combustion (fire or burning) is arguably the most common example of converting chemical energy into thermal energy. But consider that all animals create a bit of thermal energy converting chemical energy into heat (as well as some mechanical energy) when they move.
When Gas, A form of matter changes from into a Solid, It is most likely Decreasing in temperature,For Example: Ice, A Solid (heat Ice), Water, A Liquid (heat Water), Steam, A GasIf the Steam is Trapped, and this process is reversed you can see the change from a Gas to a Solid. Try this for yourself with a pot of water for instance.However, i am unsure if this if the correct answer and cannot be held responsible for any errors, Try Google?
An isotope with too many neutrons can be unstable for example Hydrogen-3 is unstable while hydrogen-1 and 2 are stable. But so can one with too few neutrons, for example lead-204 is unstable while lead-206, 207, and 208 are stable.
Beta Decay
trend is the increasing or decreasing in a line graph Example. If u choose to see number of students in a school and they are getting bigger its trend is increasing
Decreasing is the opposite of increasing. When you increase something, you have more of it; when you decrease something, you have less of it. For example: we want to increase the number of students who graduate from college. We want to decrease the number of students who drop out.
natural selection
As long as the ingredients stay in proportion, the recipe is valid. In example, if two eggs and four cups of flour are needed, then the mixture one egg and two cups of flour is viable.
There are many families of functions or function types that have both increasing and decreasing intervals. One example is the parabolic functions (and functions of even powers), such as f(x)=x^2 or f(x)=x^4. Namely, f(x) = x^n, where n is an element of even natural numbers. If we let f(x) = x^2, then f'(x)=2x, which is < 0 (i.e. f(x) is decreasing) when x<0, and f'(x) > 0 (i.e. f(x) is increasing), when x > 0. Another example are trigonometric functions, such as f(x) = sin(x). Finding the derivative (i.e. f'(x) = cos(x)) and critical points will show this.
Decreasing is the opposite of increasing. When you increase something, you have more of it; when you decrease something, you have less of it. For example: we want to increase the number of students who graduate from college. We want to decrease the number of students who drop out.
having skills
For example by decreasing the temperature or concentration.
An example would be converting cm into metres, or converting yards into feet, it is just allowing us to use a different unit of measurement.
Velocity is the measure of increasing and decreasing speed. For example... on a velocity graph, if the object being measured is gradually getting faster the line will go up. If it is getting slower, it will go down, if it is staying at a constant speed, the line will be straight
The "nth term" is an adjective that refers to the last item in any series of decreasing or increasing values of infinite scale or amount. An example sentence: "The building had been remodeled to the nth degree, leaving no detail unfinished."