The round trip distance is 200 feet. The speed in this case is 200 / .185, or 1081 feet per second.
you can reflect in thought, or reflect some thing in a Mirror. There's other ways to reflect to.
Not necessarily. I measure my height to 3 sig figs (for example 178 cm), but I may choose to report is as 180 cm (to 2 sf).
No, it is not true. They reflect the precision of the number in the context of its use. If required to calculate the population density of Greater London in 2011, I would use the population in millions - not because that is the limit of the accuracy of the census results but because greater accuracy does not add significant value to the precision of the population density.
reflect
Any smooth surface will reflect light. The better question is "How much light does each kind of smooth surface reflect?"
They suppose to do the best as they can . but some in machinic is cheater.
asking the same thing
It is a waveform component which is measured on the human scalp. The aim of this is to reflect the post-synaptic activity of a specific neural process. The electrical potential peaks at 200 milliseconds which is where the name comes from.
Significant digits do help to reflect the true precision of a measurement. This is because often the last reported digit in a measurement has an unacceptably large error associated with it. Thus, only reporting significant digits is the most conservative practice. Sometimes, however, it helps to be more accurate on a single measurement. In this case, if the measurement device is reliable to the last reported digit it may be reported for the sake of accuracy.
0, 1 1, 0
No, it should reflect the magnitude of the measurement. You wold measure the length of a river in kilometres but its width in metres.
I suppose it would reflect solar energy back into space rather than absorb it on earth
g/cm3 (grams per cubic centimeter). This measurement is used to reflect that density is a measure of both mass and volume in relation to each other.
Glass reflects some of the light that hits it, absorbs some of the lightthat enters it, but 'transmits' most of the light that hits it. That's whyyou can see things through it pretty easily.
snow melts, right, therefore it doesn't reflect all heat. with global warming and the sun's help, most of the ice from what we call the ice age has melted.
I suppose it's possible that someone could develop something and call it that, but using just the simple usual meaning of the words, no. The moon does not reflect enough ultraviolet light for you to tan yourself by.
you can reflect in thought, or reflect some thing in a Mirror. There's other ways to reflect to.