Composition
This would be a mesaure of the object's mass. You can simply take the weight of the object and divide by the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s^2 if the object is on Earth).
Mass is a characteristic of all matter, including all objects. An object's weight is the resultant force of all of the gravitational forces acting on it. An object's weight near the surface of Earth is its mass times about 9.8 m/s^2.
Velocity is defined as the rate of change of the position of an object in relation to the specification of its speed and direction of motion. Therefore, an object at rest will have zero velocity.
An object that weighs 100 newtons on or near the Earth's surface has about 10.197 kilograms of mass. It doesn't matter whether it's moving or at rest, or what its speed is. Its motion has no effect on its mass or weight.
3m/s
This would be a mesaure of the object's mass. You can simply take the weight of the object and divide by the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s^2 if the object is on Earth).
In an S-curve floral arrangemnt the elements in the arrangement form the letter "s" from top to bottom.
John Gregory Conway has written: 'Conway's encyclopedia of flower arrangement' -- subject(s): Flower arrangement 'Flowers' -- subject(s): Flower arrangement, Flower arrangement, Japanese, Japanese Flower arrangement
Element(s)
Any type of matter, as long as one of them doesn't disolve into the other one(s).
A constructor is not a function (it has no return value, not even void). As such you cannot call a constructor as you would a function. Constructors are always invoked automatically whenever an object of the class is instantiated. For example: struct S { // ...class has implicit default constructor }; static S s1; // instantiate an object of type S in static memory void f () { S s2; // instantiate an object of type S on the call stack } // s2 falls from scope here void g() { S* p = new S; // instantiate an object of type S on the heap // ... delete p; // release the object pointed to by p } // p falls from scope here int main() { f(); // call function f g(); // call function g } // s1 falls from scope here
Lee Early Quinn has written: 'Japanese free style flower arrangement' -- subject(s): Japanese Flower arrangement 'The easy magic of Japanese flower arrangement' -- subject(s): Japanese Flower arrangement
s-34
Neither, as they're the same weight. It doesn't matter what material the object/s are made of.
Twist is the spiral arrangement of the fibers around the axis of the yarn. it binds the fiber together and strenghten the yarn. There are tw type of twist one is "S" type and other one is "Z" Twist
If you think to Bose-Einstein condensate this type of matter was discovered (not invented) by A. Einstein and S. N. Bose in 1924.
I didn’t type this very well, I’ve posted the same question again, just worded better