The period (T) of a circle is represented by the equation: T=1/F, where F is the frequency.
The relationship between the period of time and the velocity in circular motion is inverse. As the period of time increases, the velocity decreases, and vice versa. This is because velocity is defined as the distance traveled per unit of time, so if the same distance is covered in a longer period of time, the velocity will be lower.
10T because F=mV^2/radius in a circle. So if the velocity and radius are the same then you will just multiply the mass by ten (10mV^2/radius) giving you 10 times your period
A circle is complete and a cycle repeat
its not circle its drag
It is the line from any point on a circle to the center
It is one 24 hour period of no sunrise at the Antarctic Circle, when the Arctic Circle experiences the same period of no sunset.
At the Arctic Circle, it's dark, with a long period of no sunrise. At the Antarctic Circle, it's bright, with a long period of no sunset.
Areas south of the Antarctic Circle during this period experience at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset. At the South Pole, the period is six months.
1. Get a giant black sheet of paper 2. Cut out a giant circle 3. Tape it to you. You're a period!
The proofreader's mark for adding a period is a small dot placed in the appropriate spot where the period should be added in the text.
The purpose of the Antarctic Circle is not to measure, it is to mark. The circle marks the latitude on earth beyond which there is at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset per year.
The Antarctic Circle is a line of latitude -- about 66 degrees S -- beyond which the geography experiences at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset per year.
"Let the Circle be Unbroken" takes place in the 1930s during the Great Depression in the rural South.
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These circles mark the point on beyond which the geography experiences at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset annually. At the farthest extent -- polar geographies -- the period is six months long.
Never.The Antarctic Circle marks the latitude on planet earth south of which at least one 24-hour period has no sunrise or no sunset.All latitudes north of the Antarctic Circle experience one sunrise and one sunset each day...until the latitude of the Arctic Circle, where the reverse occurs.