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specific weight of the sheet * area *thickness = weight of the sheet
The weight of polypropylene sheets depends on their length, width and thickness.
It depends on the thickness of the sheet which usually comes in between 0.1 to 1 mm thickness. For the same area, the later one is 10 times more heavier than the former one. Now consider a sheet with 0.63mm thickness. As the density of the steel is 8, the weight of sheet would be 8*0.63=5.04 kg/sq. meter
This depends on the thickness of the paper. Typical laser printer paper is 80g/m2 The area of an A4 sheet is 0.125m2 So, an 80g/m2 A4 sheet weighs 10g (approx 0.35 ounces)
Estimate the thickness of the soil over the area (test pits will help with this) - measure the average density of the soil (out of the test pits). You then have:- The "area" tiles the "thickness" = the volume of soil. Volume times density = weight.
Yes, it is colder, by about 30 degrees F. Why? Antarctica is a continent covered with ice. The Arctic ice simply freezes over sea water. The ice area in the Arctic is significantly smaller than the ice sheet that covers Antarctica.
From the north pole to the arctic circle. The area above the arctic circle. There is only one arctic area, but there is also an antarctic area, around the south pole.
You cannot. In general there is no relationship between the area of a slab and its thickness.
The area of Arctic Bay is 247.5 square kilometers.
the area was arctic
The ice thickness depends on season. In the antarctic sea, practically all sea-ice melts in the antarctic summer (keep in mind that antarctic land is covered by deep glaciers all year). In the arctic, in summer the ice thins. It used to retain an average thickness of a few meters, but in the past few years it thinned. On Aug 16 2010 PIOMAS published an ice volume of about 5 million cubic meters (they actually published an anomaly of about -9.7 from the 1979-2009 average of 14.7). For that date, the Arctic Climate Research at the University of Illinois published an area of about 4 million square meters (a few thousand more) so it gives about 1.25 meter average depth. Note that PIOMAS is only using a validated model plus some measurements, as there are no global direct measurements (seems there will be next year). Expect to see more numbers at end of September, as the minimum of arctic sea-ice is around mid-Septrmber.
The Arctic