Not sure about crust, but there will be one crest and 1 trough.
Since the altitude of the triangle on the sides of the trough are equal, the area covered when the water is h feet deep is 1/2*h². The volume of the trough filled at a given height will be given by V=B*h=h²/2*12=6h². If you differentiate both sides of the above equation with respect to time you get dV/dt=12*h*dh/dt The rate of change of the volume is given to be 2 cubic feet per minute, and we are asked to determine the change of height when h=1 2=12*2*dh/dt dh/dt=1/12 feet/minute
The no. of entities that can be associated with another entity. For eg. 1-1, 1-many, many-1 and many-many
how many 32 are in 1 inch
There are infinitely many possible answers. Among these are 1*1*1*375or 1*1*10*37.5There are infinitely many possible answers. Among these are 1*1*1*375or 1*1*10*37.5There are infinitely many possible answers. Among these are 1*1*1*375or 1*1*10*37.5There are infinitely many possible answers. Among these are 1*1*1*375or 1*1*10*37.5
If the question is how many fifths in 1/8, then the answer is (1/8) / (1/5) = 5/8
simple pendulum would have 1 normal modes of oscillation or natural frequencies.
1 because the crust is not that big
T=1/f .5=1/f f=2
Trenches - 2010 Defecation Hits the Oscillation 1-9 was released on: USA: 3 March 2010
Depends on the width and depth of the trough.
In order to find the frequency of an oscilloscope trace, you must first find the period, which is the time it takes for one oscillation, which can be found by measuring the amount of time from one peak our trough to the next. The frequency is the number of oscillations per second, and can be found by dividing 1 by the period in seconds.
only 1 crust. then the lithosphere, upper mantle, lower mantle, outer core, inner core.
Earth's crust varies from 3-44 miles... Thats 1% of the total Earth's mass
There are two types of Crust : 1. Continental Crust, 2. Oceanic Crust.
no , 1hz is 1 oscillation , 1000hz ( 1khz ) is 1000 oscillations !
time taken by pendulum/to complete 1 oscillation
There is a hurricane season on both the Pacific and the Atlantic from June 1 trough November 30, each year. As such, there has been at least one tropical storm or hurricane passing trough Mexico every year for the last 100 years.