I assume you mean the bubble-ish look when it sits on leaves or grass. This is caused by the hydrophobic nature of the surface of leaves, blades, or needles.
This same affect appears on freshly-waxed cars because the wax repells water. Same for lumber that has been treated with a protectant.
A sphere, actually a sphere is wrong, its more of a teardrop shape....
A teardrop is the most aerodynamically effective shape for a rocket travelling through the atmosphere. From an engineering standpoint, a cylindrical shape accommodates compressed gas cylinders (fuel and oxygen) most efficiently. For a rocket operating outside the atmosphere, shape is irrelevant because it will not encounter drag no matter how un-aerodynamic the shape.
Yes, the goddess of dew was Hersê or Ersa, daughter of Zeus and Selene.
Dew can form in any season but it generally most common in the fall.
i think the answer would be dew because dew is fog just before it hits the dew point. im not sure if this is correct so try to look at other things before you decide this is the answer for you.
Sort of a teardrop shape.
A teardrop shape?
a teardrop shape
teardrop.
Yes for instance a dipole will have a doughnut shape field and a directional like a yagie will have a long teardrop shape field at the front end and a shorter teardrop field at the rear and some smaler fields sideways and a parabolic disc wil have a very long teardrop shape field
A sphere, actually a sphere is wrong, its more of a teardrop shape....
The shape is called the teardrop shape!In 2-dimensions, its parametric equation isx = sin(t)*[sin(t/2)]^my = cos(t) for -pi < t < piThe integer constant, m, changes the shape of the teardrop. At m = 0 the shape is a circle and as m increases the shape gets a pointier the top. m = 3 is about right.The 3-d version is obtained by rotating this shape about the y axis.
A domesticated hedgehog should have a teardrop shape when viewed from both the sides and top.
In its conventional form, of a circular shape with tapering sides, NO.
While each seed can vary, most apple seeds are in the shape of a teardrop.
Long legs, teardrop shape, beady eyes, dish ears, quills over back.
The shape is called the teardrop shape!In 2-dimensions, its parametric equation isx = sin(t)*sinm(t/2)y = cos(t) for -pi < t < piThe integer constant, m, changes the shape of the teardrop. At m = 0 the shape is a circle and as m increases the shape gets a pointier the top. I think 3 is about right.The 3-d version is obtained by rotating this shape about the y axis.The shape is called the teardrop shape!In 2-dimensions, its parametric equation isx = sin(t)*sinm(t/2)y = cos(t) for -pi < t < piThe integer constant, m, changes the shape of the teardrop. At m = 0 the shape is a circle and as m increases the shape gets a pointier the top. I think 3 is about right.The 3-d version is obtained by rotating this shape about the y axis.The shape is called the teardrop shape!In 2-dimensions, its parametric equation isx = sin(t)*sinm(t/2)y = cos(t) for -pi < t < piThe integer constant, m, changes the shape of the teardrop. At m = 0 the shape is a circle and as m increases the shape gets a pointier the top. I think 3 is about right.The 3-d version is obtained by rotating this shape about the y axis.The shape is called the teardrop shape!In 2-dimensions, its parametric equation isx = sin(t)*sinm(t/2)y = cos(t) for -pi < t < piThe integer constant, m, changes the shape of the teardrop. At m = 0 the shape is a circle and as m increases the shape gets a pointier the top. I think 3 is about right.The 3-d version is obtained by rotating this shape about the y axis.