Nothing. The cylinder's surface area does not have a GCF.
The surface area of a cylinder is a single number. A single number cannot have a greatest common factor.
Reflection by cloud droplets....
It is the reflectivity of the surface. However, it is important to note that the reflected fraction depends on the wavelength of the incident light.
There is no particular term. This is because the reflectivity of a surface varies across the electromagnetic spectrum so a surface which reflects a large proportion of blue wavelengths in sunlight may or may not reflect a similar proportion of red wavelengths.
The Earth's surface is covered by human 99%. add. the above seems not to consider the significant desert areas in the major continents (except Europe!), and Antarctica.
There is no special name. The fraction of sunlight which is reflected will be different from the fraction of other light. The reflectivity of a surface varies with the wavelength of the incident light.
It remains the same or increases in surface area.
The surface area goes as the edge ength squared, so if you double the edges you get four times the area
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
The crescent shaped surface of liquid that forms in pipettes and graduated cylinders is called a meniscus.
No.
you put: a squared over b squared = surface area of the smaller solid over surface area of the bigger solid