3 second
You would have to know the weight or density of the pebbles, the coefficient of friction on the pebble's surface and the coefficient of friction on the ground.
The minimum standard luminous intensity for an office room is typically around 300-500 lux at desktop level for general office tasks. However, it can vary depending on specific requirements and tasks performed.
The pump typically needs to run for about 8-12 hours a day to maintain a consistent chlorine level when using a chlorine generator. This ensures that the water is properly circulated and that chlorine is being distributed throughout the pool. Be sure to follow the manufacturer's recommendations for your specific chlorine generator model.
-3
The minimum speed for cutting steel with an aluminum oxide stone is 35 m/s.
3 seconds
When following large trucks, maintain at least a minimum of a ______ second following distance.
10 seconds
3
At minimum 3 seconds. If the road conditions are adverse, it should be 5 seconds or more.
3 Seconds Two seconds
It depends on road and vehicle conditions. Under dry ideal conditions always maintain a 2 second interval. If it is wet double the distance, and if it is snow triple that distance. On icy roads stay home.
At 100km/h or 60mph the minimum recommended time is 3 seconds .
According to Federal Guidelines 3 seconds is the minimum recommended.
The class interval is the maximum possible value in the class less the maximum possible value in the class below. The second is equivalent to the minimum possible value in the class.
There are different types of interval estimates. Given a rounded value for some measure, the interval estimate, based on rounding, is the interval from the minimum value that would be rounded up to the given value to the maximum value that would be rounded down to the given value. For example, given 4.5 with rounding to the tenths, the minimum of the interval is 4.45 and the maximum is 4.55 so that the interval estimate is (4.45, 4.55). Statistical interval estimates for a random variable (RV) are probabilistic. For example, given some probability measure (for example 95% or 5% significance level), the interval estimate for a random variable is any interval such that the probability of the true value being inside that interval is 95%. Often the interval is symmetrical about the mean value of the RV that is being estimated, but this need not be the case - particularly if the RV is near an extreme of the distribution.
It can't - unless you analyze the function restricted to a certain interval.