5.7 ounces
http://www.laxmania.com/other/shaftcomparison.html
No, sliding down a pole does not cause chemical energy to form. The energy required for sliding down the pole comes from the firefighter's potential energy as they descend due to gravity. Chemical energy is stored in the body and released during metabolic processes, not during activities like sliding down a pole.
No, in a dipole moment the poles have opposite charges. One pole will be positive and the other pole will be negative. This creates a net dipole moment.
A monopole is a single charge or magnetic pole that generates a field, such as an electric charge or a north or south magnetic pole. A dipole consists of two equal and opposite charges or poles separated by a distance, producing a dipole moment that creates a characteristic field pattern. In essence, a monopole has one pole, while a dipole has two poles.
No, no matter what, magnets have poles. In other words, magnets will always have a positive and negative side. If you cut you magnet in half, those two new magnets will both have + and - sides. Do this infinity times until you have a magnet 1 atom thick. The atom will still have a positive and negative pole. Hope this helps.
Boiling point of water is related to atmospheric pressure not environmental factors. The north pole is not on a landmass so the assumed elevation is sea level, and water boils @ 100°C at sea level.
4 pounds
10 oz for a short pole, 20 oz for a long pole... hickorylax.com has the weights of their shafts on the webpage
It depends on what d-pole it is.
they played Lacrosse,hoop and pole game,and,cup and pin game :)
Lacrosse
Yes, in men's lacrosse only two of the defensive shafts are long pole
A long pole in Lacrosse is a defence pole.
The bulb in the pole weighs less than a pound. The actual pole itself weighs around 250 pounds. The weight may vary slightly by the amount of bulbs.
Chunkey, Lacrosse, Game of the Pole. and OTHER STUFF.
Pole Vault
I think you can just go to a homedepot or do it center and they can probably get it to you perfectly even
Ncaa rules say that a dpole must be between 40 and 72 inches