No. Earth moves in an ellipse around the Sun; when it is closest to the Sun (at its periapsis, in January), it moves faster, and when it is furthest from the Sun (at its apapsis), it moves slower.
The rate constant is the reaction rate divided by the concentration terms.
A rate constant
Some plates move at a rate of several centimeters each year. Other move only a millimeters per day.
In a zero order overall process, the rate and rate constant will be the same. (Reaction order is an exponent, and if that exponent is "0" then the value is "1" and will cancel out.)
The moon is moving away from the Earth at a rate of about 3.8 centimetres - or 1.5 inches - per year.
They tend to move at a fairly constant rate. The only major changes happen with earthquakes.
yes. The acceleration rate is a constant, the gravitational constant. Here, the earth's mass is assumed to be a constant.
It would be convenient to specify which of Earth's movements you are talking about. In the yearly movement around the Sun, Earth moves at a rate of 30 km per second.
Yes.
There is no difference between them they are same rate constant is another name of specific rate constant
Do you mean what Law of Conservation keeps the Earth spinning at the same rate? If so, that's the Conservation of Angular Momentum.
Muscles contract and relax to move a joint. ... Muscles contract at a constant rate. Muscles contract and relax to move a joint.
The rate constant is the reaction rate divided by the concentration terms.
The rate constant is the reaction rate divided by the concentration terms.
The rate constant is the reaction rate divided by the concentration terms.
No. Only a linear function has a constant rate of change.No. Only a linear function has a constant rate of change.No. Only a linear function has a constant rate of change.No. Only a linear function has a constant rate of change.
A relative rate constant the rate at which a reaction will take place. Ex. V = k [A][B] the constant ,k, is a constant value for the rate of the reaction in said equation.