The gradient of a line is the same as the slope of a line. It will tell someone measuring the line how straight the line is.
(-1.5,0) (1.5,0) what is the gradient?
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
It is approximate!It is approximate!It is approximate!It is approximate!
A positive gradient goes uphill from left to right A negative gradient goes downhill from left to right
If the gradient is a positive number the curve is increasing, and if the gradient is a negative number it is decreasing.
Concentration Gradient
find the gradient
The answer depends on the gradient of WHAT!
Gradient ratio is a term used to describe the difference in concentration of a substance between two points in a system, usually in the context of separation processes like chromatography or electrophoresis. It is calculated by dividing the change in concentration by the distance over which the change occurs. A higher gradient ratio indicates a steeper change in concentration over a shorter distance.
basically the reciprocal of the original lines gradient is going to be the gradient for the perpendicular line (remember the signs should switch). For example if i had a line with the gradient of 3, then the gradient of the perpendicular line will be -1over3. But if the line had the gradient of -3, then the line perpendicular to that line will have the gradient 1over3.
Danube river gradient
these tiles are gradient.
(-1.5,0) (1.5,0) what is the gradient?
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
Gradient= Vertical gain / Horizontal distance Hope this helps ;P
concentration gradient
Probably an incorrect spelling of voltage gradient.