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It is called the mantissa, and is a number whose absolute value is in the range [1, 10).
asked to work out the product of two or more numbers, then you need to multiply the numbers together. If you are asked to find the sum of two or more numbers, then you need to add the numbers together.
Method 1: 75 - 31 = 44, half of 44 is 22 which is the smaller number so the larger is 53. Method 2: 75 = 38 + 37, difference 1. Add 15 to 38 and subtract 15 from 37 and you get 53 and 22. The choice is yours...
Since you need at least two numbers to create a sum, I'm going to say "no."
An octahedron - which is like two rectangular pyramids whose bases have been stuck together.
In a scientific method (or experiment), a dependent variable is one that changes throughout the experiment. These are the ones whose changes need to be recorded. Independent variables are those that influence the experiment, but do not change throughout the experiment and remain the same value.
Reef cementing is done by coral polyps whose 'homes' are tiny cavities in the coral that they create.
Habenaria cristata is the scientific, Latin or binomial name of the Crested Fringed Orchid.Specifically, a scientific name brings together at least two words. The first identifies the genus, whose hallmark is the rein or strap, Habenaria, to which the long floral lip is likened. The second is the species, whose lip is described as crested, cristata, by the fringed floral lip.
Everyone who's ever had a theory has been wrong in some way; it's just we don't know if the current one is wrong yet. This is called the Scientific Method.
who was a nineteenth century monk whose hypotheses about inheritance in pea plants have became scientific laws
who was a nineteenth century monk whose hypotheses about inheritance in pea plants have became scientific laws
Neils Bohr
One of the vital parts of the scientific method, is its predictive ability - its ability to predict a behaviour beyond that presently observed. By changing the variable we obtain a new data point, whose validity we may prove by experiment. Otherwise all we have is a single (or just a few) casual observations.
Nicolaus Copernicus
Aristole
Whose he
John Cage