An internal caliper gauge.
The diameter is the measurement of a line that goes right through a circle, through the centre point. In cases where we have a ring or some other such object with multiple circles, we would have an external diameter and an internal diameter. The internal diameter is the diameter of the inner circle. The external diameter is the diameter of the outer circle.
The diameter does not affect the length. It is a separate dimension. Diameter is the cross sectional measure of a circular object.
Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
apparent diameter
Volume = cross-sectional area times height
The diameter is the measurement of a line that goes right through a circle, through the centre point. In cases where we have a ring or some other such object with multiple circles, we would have an external diameter and an internal diameter. The internal diameter is the diameter of the inner circle. The external diameter is the diameter of the outer circle.
The diameter does not affect the length. It is a separate dimension. Diameter is the cross sectional measure of a circular object.
Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
Yes, a calibrated ocular micrometer can be used to measure the diameter or length of a field or object. Essentially, that is all that it is used for.
measure the circumference, c. Since c = pi x d where d = diameter pi = 3.1415926535897932384676..... diameter = circumference / pi
Temperature is the measure of how fast particles are moving in an object.
[object Object]
Internal threads are threads inside of a hole in something. Like a nut, for instance. External threads are threads on the outside of a cylindrical object. Like a bolt, for instance. hth, Steve
apparent diameter
The diameter of the internal measurement of the cylinder.A mathematical cylinder only has one diameter.A real world object that is a cylinder (e.g. a pipe) has a wall with a thickness and thus the internal and external diameters will differ by twice the thickness of the wall.
It is not possible to provide a sensible answer since weight depends on the volume of the object. For a cylindrical object it is necessary to have three measures: outer diameter, inner diameter and length. Instead of the diameters you can have radii or circumference, and instead of two diameters you can have one diameter and the thickness. In any case, three measures are required. Only one is given in the question and there is no indication as to what it refers to!
We will assume there is no difficulty in weighing the object, so the problem becomes how to measure the volume of the object accurately enough to calculate the density within a reasonable degree of certainty. There are several possible ways.Immerse the object in a non-reactive liquid (oil, perhaps) and measure the amount of liquid displaced.Apply a thin coat of insulating material (paint, or wax) all over the object, and then immerse the coated object in water and measure the amount of water displaced.Cut the object into a group of regular geometric shapes (boxes, spheres, prisms, cones, pyramids, etc.), and measure the dimensions of each geometric shape, and calculate the aggregate volume (destructive, and less accurate)Drill a cylindrical core sample of the object, weigh the sample, and precisely measure the dimensions of the cylindrical sample to calculate volume (destructive, and assumes the density of the object is uniform)Make a clay, wax, or other mold of the object, and measure the volume of the mold.Place the object in an three dimensional laser scanner and compute the volume using the software in the scanner computer.