The Hebrew word for water is ×ž×™× (mayim), and it's numerical value is 90.
The numerical value would depend on the volume of the jar
Yes for example water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius
the number 40 is associated with water in Hebrew. It's represented by the letter mem (מ) which is the first letter in the Hebrew word for water, and also assumed to come from the Egyptian hieroglyph for water.
Specific Gravity is a unitless number because it is the ratio between the density of the material of interest and a standard material (e.g. water). The units cancel out leaving a numerical value only.
(mass)(temperture difference)(4.18)
Specific heat is dimensionless, and dimensionless units have the same value in any system. Specific heat is the ratio between two densities - that of the substance considered, and that of water. The ratio of two quantities of the same dimension will naturally be a dimensionless number.
1 calorie/gram °C
The word "water" is masculine plural in Hebrew, so the pronoun would be הם ("they").
NA, Avogadro's number, is the value of entities in one mole: 6.022*10+23
"Ma'im" (מים).
Donald T. Resio has written: 'A numerical model for wind-wave prediction in deep water' -- subject(s): Numerical analysis, Wind waves
You can represent numbers as the symbol for that number, like e π (pi) or √2The numbers above are irrational, meaning they cannot be represented as a fraction of 2 integers. But you can give the numerical value as a decimal approximation:e = approx 2.7182818285pi = approx 3.1415926536√2 = approx 1.4142135624You would need the numerical value, if you needed to give an answer to a calculation, like 'how many cubic feet of water are in a pool in a shape of a circle, 20 feet diameter, and 4 feet deep', for example.Nobody wants to see an answer like 400*pi cubic feet. They want to see 1256.64 cubic feet (or 9400 gallons). That's what makes sense to people.