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-- Since you're asking for "parallels", we know that the discussion concerns latitude.-- The total extent of latitude on the Earth is 180 degrees.-- The north and south poles are degenerate "parallels", i.e. circles with zero radiusat 90 degrees north and south latitude.-- If we draw in all the rest of the parallels between the poles at intervals of5 degrees, we'll need to draw 35 of them.
Elba
Sarcomere
Parallels, as the name inplies, run parallel to each other in an east-west orientation. Meridians run through both poles, and so cannot be parallel.
babylon
If the speed is constant then equal distances are covered in equal intervals of time If acceleration is constant then equal change in velocity occurs in equal intervals of time.
An arithmetic sequence does not have a constant rate of increase or decrease between successive terms, so it cannot be called anything!The constant increase or decrease is called the common difference.
The ratio between successive numbers must be a constant.
Intervals are a space or a period of time between things. Regular intervals would be a period of time between things that is always constant; the time stays the same(:
In a convoluted way, yes.
The sequence in the question is NOT an arithmetic sequence. In an arithmetic sequence the difference between each term and its predecessor (the term immediately before) is a constant - including the sign. It is not enough for the difference between two successive terms (in any order) to remain constant. In the above sequence, the difference is -7 for the first two intervals and then changes to +7.
No. The ratio of consecutive values of y for equal x-intervals will be approx constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.
A descending geometric sequence is a sequence in which the ratio between successive terms is a positive constant which is less than 1.
An arithmetic sequence is an ordered set of numbers such that the difference between any two successive members of the set is a constant.