Absolute zero, melting/freezing point of pure water, and boiling point of pure water.
Two points do not provide enough information to define a circle: a minimum of three points is required to uniquely define a circle unless one of the points happens to be the centre and the other is on the circle. In that case, however, it is necessary to know which is which.
4 points define a plane.
No, 2 points define a line, 3 points define a plane.
No, two points define a line. It takes three points to define a plane.
Gregory F. Strouse has written: 'Standard Reference Material 1747' 'Indium freezing-point standard--SRM 1745' -- subject(s): Standards, Effect of temperature on, Indium, Melting points, Freezing points 'Standard reference material 1744' -- subject(s): Aluminum, Standards, Freezing points, Temperature measurements, Thermal properties
The BIPM could not vote on an SI unit without reference points. novelstar:)
what are main points on temperature
Standard deviation shows how much variation there is from the "average" (mean). A low standard deviation indicates that the data points tend to be very close to the mean, whereas high standard deviation indicates that the data are spread out over a large range of values.
It can allow you to define shapes but that is not quite the same thing as an object.
The two foci are necessary to define the location of an ellipse, but the shape depends on the eccentricity, which is related to the lengths of the two axes.
In Newtonian three dimensional space, two points can create a line, three to "define" it. In Einsteins "time-space", a minimum of four points are required.
yes, three points in the least number of points that can be used to define a plane. if you used two points you would only have a line, and one point is a point