Since bacteria multiply in a geometric progression, the glass would be half full exactly one cycle before the watch glass is entirely full, by volume. Assuming none of the bacteria die during the process of multiplication. (NOT REQUIRED)
The air that may be exhaled above the normal volume in a forced exhalation is called "reserve volume" or "expiratory reserve volume." This is the additional volume of air that can be forcibly exhaled after a normal tidal volume exhalation.
It makes bacteria the ultimate r-selected organism. They are small, thus requiring few nutrients, thus having a short life span and a fast rate at which they reproduce, so that an individual bacteria is incredibly weak, has low resistance, but a given species as a whole is incredibly strong, able to bounce back quickly from a cataclysm, has high resiliency.
The volume of air inhaled or exhaled per breath is typically around 500 mL for an average adult at rest. This volume can vary depending on factors such as physical activity level, lung health, and individual differences.
Functional residual capacity (FRC) is the volume of air remaining in the lungs after a normal exhalation, while residual volume (RV) is the volume of air remaining in the lungs after a maximal exhalation. FRC includes both the expiratory reserve volume and the residual volume, while RV is the volume of air that cannot be exhaled from the lungs.
Density depends on mass and volume. Mass is the amount of matter in an object, while volume is the amount of space it occupies. The formula for density is density = mass/volume.
That is correct for finding the volume of a cylinder.
To find out volume you need to times length by breadth by height
The answer depends on what you wish to multiply the volume by!
If you know the density of the rectangular body you can find the volume and the plug it into this equation mass= (density)*(volume) If you have the means you can just submerge the body completely in water and find the volume of the water displaced that will be the mass as waters density is 1 g/cm^3
you multiply when you are finding the volume of something is because that is how you find how much space something takes
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is quite simple,it is length multiply by width multiply by height.That's all.
You compare (divide) one volume to another, then multiply by 100 to convert to percent.You compare (divide) one volume to another, then multiply by 100 to convert to percent.You compare (divide) one volume to another, then multiply by 100 to convert to percent.You compare (divide) one volume to another, then multiply by 100 to convert to percent.
That's going to depend on what you'll use the volume to find.There's no single rule that you can use every time you see volume.
miltply
No. You divide mass by volume to get density.
You multiply the length by the width by the height to get the volume.
First you need to calculate the volume - pi x radius2 x height. Then you multiply the volume with the density of whatever is in the cylinder.First you need to calculate the volume - pi x radius2 x height. Then you multiply the volume with the density of whatever is in the cylinder.First you need to calculate the volume - pi x radius2 x height. Then you multiply the volume with the density of whatever is in the cylinder.First you need to calculate the volume - pi x radius2 x height. Then you multiply the volume with the density of whatever is in the cylinder.