all road transport does, it's safer becos it gives you more time to react if something comes from the other side of the bend where you can't see, and gives you little time to react, so the slower you're going, the more reaction time you have to the unknown.
In a stick shift (gear stick) car you'd usually drop down to 2nd gear for a bend
It will show you whether it is a constant rate or if it speeds up or slows down.
Indifference curve is a curve. A curve that is being intersected with the budget line. In order to show the maximum satisfaction. Dave Ono:
See the related link. A perfectly inelastic demand would be a line straight up and down. That would show that demand is constant regardless of the price.
Dogs may lay down when another dog approaches as a way to show submission, respect, or to avoid conflict. It is a common behavior in the canine world to communicate non-aggressive intentions and to maintain social harmony within the pack.
Solubility charts can curve up or down because of the different ways in which solubility changes with temperature for each substance. Some substances exhibit an increase in solubility with temperature (curve up) due to endothermic dissolution processes, while others show a decrease in solubility with temperature (curve down) because of exothermic dissolution processes. This variation is influenced by factors such as entropy changes, enthalpy changes, and the specific intermolecular forces involved in the dissolution process for each substance.
An S-curve represents the logistic growth model, which describes how a population grows rapidly initially, then slows as it approaches the carrying capacity of its environment. This model reflects the limitations imposed by resources, competition, and other environmental factors, leading to a stabilization of population size. As a result, the growth curve resembles an "S" shape, indicating the transition from exponential growth to a plateau.
depends what graph....
You can choose to shift the demand curve to the right i.e. expansion of demand.
normal curve
Logistic growth
An S-shaped curve, often referred to as a sigmoid curve, typically represents a growth pattern that starts slowly, accelerates in the middle phase, and then levels off as it approaches a maximum limit. This type of curve is commonly seen in biological populations, technology adoption, and the diffusion of innovations. The initial slow growth phase indicates lag time, the steep middle phase shows rapid increase, and the plateau reflects saturation or resource limitations. Overall, it illustrates how systems evolve over time in response to various factors.
The curve to the right shows that radioactive decay follows an exponential decrease over time.