No. A percentage gradient tells you how many you go up or down for every 100 along, for example a gradient of 5% means for every 100m along you go, you will go up or down 5m. Given a percentage gradient, converting it to a decimal (by dividing by 100) will give the TAN of the angle of the slope, for example a gradient of 5% means the angle = arctan(5/100) = arctan(0.05) ~= 2.9o. The 1 in x gradient that tells you for every 1 up or down you go you go x along, for example 1 in 20 means you will go up or down 1 yd for every 20 yds along.
Changes the gradient of the line E.g: 2x. The gradient is going to be 2, for every one along you go up two. If -2x the gradient will go to the right like 2x, but will go down two for every one going across :) hope this helped x
the concentration gradient was set-up because they wanted to kill the Jews
Draw a tangent to the curve at the point where you need the gradient and find the gradient of the line by using gradient = up divided by across
Primer Mover (agonist)
pectoralis major
emilie mover
Deltoids, triceps and pectorals.
2004 dodge grand caravan 4.0sxt cuts up when apply brake in gear and rpm go up and down.
Graph it - if it's curving up then the gradient is increasing. OR take it's derivitive.
Muscles can only pull, so for joints that need to go both ways (like your elbow, up and down) you need one muscle to flex, one to extend. These are Flexors and Extensors, or can be called the Prime Mover and Antagonist. There's a third muscle which are grouped up as the synergists, which simply helps the Prime Mover do its job. For example, Lifting your leg up would be using the following: Quadriceps as the Prime Mover, Hamstring as the Antagonist, and your glutes as the synergist. Hope that helped! ^^
you will have to go under.raise it up ,put some jack stands and reach up!