miligram equivalent
If you mean potassium Cyanide, the formula is KCN
Do you mean the molecular formula? If so, then it is C4H10. If you mean empirical formula, then it is C2H5.
Copper
Carbon
You worded your question weird what do you mean by that??
Of or to do with a cathode.
Mean = Xam + (∑fd over N) i Where i: (Upper Value - Lower Value) / no. of classes
A formula is math sentence where you substitute numbers for letters and solve to get an unknown value.
It can be used for division. So the following formula will divide the value in A3 by the value in A10: =A3/A10
ultra filtration rinse is used to remove the extra amount of paint from the electro diposited body................
A formula does not normally have a mean!
That would depend on the formula. Zero as a result of a formula could be as a result of a calculation. On other occasions zero might be returned as a default value or when no other result is appropriate. You would really need to have details of the formula and the cells and values it references to know what it may mean in a certain context. Zero could also be a value used within a formula. Again it would depend on the context. Zero is often used in a function as an argument. The specific reason would be different in different functions.
=((End Value/Beginning Value) ^ (1/# of intervening years)) - 1 what is mean by this sign ^ otherwise let clarify particular formula
The formula does the following, it takes value in cell D2 subtracts it from the value in cell F4 and then adds the values in cell E8 and D1.
Mean absolute deviation = sum[|x-mean(x)|]/n Where mean(x) = sum(x)/n and n is the number of observations. |y| denotes the absolute value of y.
n=6
Standard Deviation equation(s): (1) full population s.d. = SQRT ( SUM (Observed Value - Mean Value)2 ) / N (2) sample of full population s.d. = SQRT ( SUM (Observed Value - Mean Value)2 ) / ( N - 1 ) where N is the number of Observed values.