Cows do not have "periods." They have what are called Estrous periods or cycles. They last around 21 days long, with heat or estrus lasting around 24 hours.
A cow's digestive system is nearly three times as big as a human's. The stomach consists of four general parts, whereas a human's only consists of three.
about 5 metres
For dairy cows it is around two months. For beef cows, it can range from two months to at least four.
Zebu cows usually have quite a long gestation period, which can stretch from 290 to 300 days in length.
As with all mammals - Mummy cows. Cows are born live after a period of development inside the mother.
The gestation period of a Chauri cow (which is a cross between a yak and a domestic bovine of Bos primigenius indicusbreeding) is around 9 to 10 months in length, which translates to around 290 to 315 days in length.
The gestation period. You can also call it the pregnancy period as well.
The period is proportional to the square root of the length so if you quadruple the length, the period will double.
The period increases too.
Technically and mathematically, the length is the onlything that affects its period.
Horse cows do not exist.
Since Belgian Blues typically are slow to mature, that would coincide with an ability to have a lengthy gestation period. Thus, the gestation period for a Belgian Blue cow would typically be from 290 to 300 days in length.
Yes, the length of pendulum affects the period. For small swings, the period is approximately 2 pi square-root (L/g), so the period is proportional to the square root of the length. For larger swings, the period increases exponentially as a factor of the swing, but the basic term is the same so, yes, length affects period.
The period is directly proportional to the square root of the length.