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When the lift is accelerating downwards. See related question.
Light coming from the fish under water deviate from its original path due to refraction phenomenon and its image is displaced from its actual position. The image of fish is appeared at shallower depth than its actual depth
Apparent weight of an object is the weight of an object when the object is partially or totally immersed in a fluid{liquid/gas} normally apparent weight of an object is less than the real weight of an object due to an upward force {upthrust} which is produced by the pressure difference inside the fluids.
Use a wattmeter, as it only reads 'real power' of your load. Use an ammeter and a voltmeter, and the product of the two readings will give you 'apparent power' of your load. Since apparent power is the vector sum of real power and reactive power, use the following equation to find the reactive power of your load: (reactive power)2 = (apparent power)2 - (real power)2
Yes
No its actually the opposite
When the depth of filling is less than the thickness (less than complete), it is specified inside the plug weld symbol!!!
Apparent power is VA. Real power is W reactive power is VAR. Under an inductive+resistive load the VA is higher than W
NO for Integers NO for Real Numbers proof 1 * any integer is not bigger than that integer nor is 0 * any integer. proof for Real Numbers is easier any real < 1 * any real > 0 is not larger than the second Real for example .5 * 1 = .5 is less than 1 or .5 * 2 = 1 less than 2 or .5 * = 1 less than 2 or -1 *3 = -3 less than 3 so all fractions times a positive Real is less than that positive Real All negative numbers times a positive Real is less than that positive Real and 0 or 1 times all positive Reals is also less than that positive Real NO NO NO is the answer
cause Y0LO
< is less than > is greater than
Earthquakes occurring at a depth of less than 70 km are classified as 'shallow-focus' earthquakes, while those with a focal-depth between 70 and 300 km are commonly termed 'mid-focus' or 'intermediate-depth' earthquake.