Want this question answered?
Yes
milli bar
An isoline is used on maps to represent points of equal value. The isoline for air pressure is an isobar.
Meteorologists draw lines called isobars on weather maps to connect locations with the same air pressure. Wind blows from areas of high to low pressure.
A map term is kind of skill used on maps such as latitude and longitude.
All isolines, or iso-intensity lines, connect points having equal values. Weather maps generally contain isobars, lines that connect points with equal barometeric pressure
Yes
milli bar
In weather maps, atmospheric pressure is measured in millibars. Standard atmospheric pressure is 1013.2 millibars at sea level. Air pressure varies depending on temperature and air density.
An isoline is used on maps to represent points of equal value. The isoline for air pressure is an isobar.
The National Weather Service makes weather maps with special lines. Isotherm is a line that connects points of equal temperature. Isobar is a line that is drawn to connect equal atmosphere pressure.
Meteorologists draw lines called isobars on weather maps to connect locations with the same air pressure. Wind blows from areas of high to low pressure.
Pressure is shown with white curvy lines. The closer the lines are to each other in a certain area, the higher the pressure is. The farter apart they are, the lower the pressure is in that area.
There are 5 types of weather maps. There are Pressure Maps, Station Model Maps, Aviation Maps, Temperature Maps, and Streamline Maps.
A map term is kind of skill used on maps such as latitude and longitude.
no, f(x) = 1 and g(x) = xx are not the same function. The first function maps all values of x to 1. In essence, no matter what x is, the value f(x) will always equal 1. g(x) maps all values of x to the square of the number entered. For example, g(2) = 4 while f(2) = 1. Because the two functions do not have equivalent outputs for the same input, they cannot be the same function.
to measure radioactivity and to make maps