The min and max temp of mars i 1,299 degrees celcius and -1,000,000 degrees celcius
YES
Well, the traditional superpave grade is on the order of PG ##-##, this means, for example. A grade of asphalt, say, PG 70-40 is a mix where the 70 stands for the asphalt temp max over the next seven days after layment of 70 degrees and the min experienced temp the grade should encounter is 40 degrees. This means, that this PG 70-40, is where the 70 degrees is the layment temp max and the min temp to ever encounter is 40 degrees. This mix uses high grade crude oil and aggregate. Other grades use typical crude, modifiers and aggregate depending on the roadway. If your question pertains to what aggregate size, type of modifier or crude selection, this is something that you would need to engineer. Far to complicated to detail in this section. Thanks,
You can lay asphalt any season as long as the air and the ground temperature are in the proper range. below a certain temp it's a definite no-no.
#include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> void main(void) { int max=0,min=0; int temp; int n,i; clrscr(); printf("what is the lenght of number set?\n"); scanf("%d",&n); printf("\n\nNow enter the numbers\n"); for(i=1;i<=n;i++) { scanf("%d",&temp); if(temp>max)max=temp; if(i==1)min=temp; if(temp<min)min=temp; } printf("\n\nThe range of set is %d",max-min); getch(); }
65*
It will not adhere.
M.P=min TEMP From where a solid begins to melt. B.P=MIN TEMP FROM WHERE( MELTED SOLID) OR LIQUID BEGINS to boil.
How is anybody suppose to know that
by laying down and thinking about nothing
198 degrees min running temp. 210 max running temp. The hotter the temp the more fuel economy.
fro implementing selection sort yiou have to first find the max or the min value in the array; here you go: for(i=0;i<=maxsize;i++) { min=a[i]; loc=i; for(j=1;j<=maxsize;j++) { if(min>a[j]) { min=a[j]; loc=j; } } if(loc!=i) { temp=a[i]; a[i]=a[loc]; a[loc]=temp; } }