Decimeter
centimeter
Kilometer * * * * * No, a kilometre is 103 times larger (not lager!). 10-3 times larger is a millimetre.
1 meter is equal to 1000 millimeters. It's all in the name. 'Milli' denotes 1/1000. Hence 1 millimeter is 1/1000th of a meter.
There are 1000 microns in a millimetre. As 1000 is a millimetre, 0.1 millimetres will be 1000*0.1 which is 100 microns.
There are some bacteria that can be quite large (in the scale of bacteria), like Epulopiscium fishelsoni, which reaches length of 0.7 mm (thus 150 times bigger than larger bacteria). This is the size of many small insects and crustaceans. You can see this bacteria with the unaided eye. This species is the largest bacterial species ever found, living in the gut of most surgeonfish species
1 kilometer are 1,000 meters.Kilometer (km) = A metric unit of length equal to 1,000 metersThe answerer is in the name: Kilo = As a prefix for units of measurement, one thousand times
decimeter
10 mm = 1 cm 10 cm = 1 dm 10 dm = 1 m The length that is 100 times larger than a millimeter is known as a decimetre. It is not a commonly used unit of measure.
Metre.
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The name of the larger side of a rectangle is length
A meter is a measure of length. So a measure that is 1000 times larger than a metre would still be a length: it would never ever be a volume. So the question makes no sense.
A meter is a measure of length. So a measure that is 1000 times larger than a metre would still be a length: it would never ever be a volume. So the question makes no sense.
a cubic centimeter is a cc, there is no special name for a cubic millimeter.
That is the kilometer.
Kilometer * * * * * No, a kilometre is 103 times larger (not lager!). 10-3 times larger is a millimetre.
diameter is a nother name to get radius if you times the diameter bye the length and widht you should get the radiusdiameter is a nother name to get radius if you times the diameter bye the length and widht you should get the radius
Perimeter is a unit of length. Area is a unit of area. The two units are not directly convertible.However, the area of a rectangle is length times width, and the perimeter is two times length plus two times width. Given constant perimeter, a square has maximum area, while a very thin rectangle has nearly zero area. (In calculus terms, the limit of the area as length or width goes to zero is zero.)Depending on how you want to name your units, you can always find a rectangle whose perimeter is "larger" than area, but this is a numerical trick that is not valid in any school of thought of mathematics that I know.