It has "zero" length because wheat does not have a tap rot.
no wheat is a fibrous root
no wheat is a fibrous root
yes
Margaret Rose Phillips has written: 'Environmental and genetic factors affecting wheat seedling root number and length' -- subject(s): Breeding, Roots (Botany), Wheat
wheat plant have fiberous root
The root word for length in the metric system is "meter."
First, take the square root, to get the length of a side. Then (because of Pythagoras), multiply the length of the side by the square root of 2.First, take the square root, to get the length of a side. Then (because of Pythagoras), multiply the length of the side by the square root of 2.First, take the square root, to get the length of a side. Then (because of Pythagoras), multiply the length of the side by the square root of 2.First, take the square root, to get the length of a side. Then (because of Pythagoras), multiply the length of the side by the square root of 2.
Wheat and other cereal plants are grasses, and grasses have fibrous roots.
The square root of what? If you take the square root of the area, the answer will be the length of the side. If the area is, for example, in square meters, the length of a side will be in meters.
The volume of a cube is determined by cubing the length of one edge, so the cube root of the volume will give you the length of an edge. (In a cube, all of the edges are the same length)
meter
You multiply the length of a side by the square root of 2.If you only have the area, square root it to find the length of a side.