Nanocomputer
1.small scale embedded systems 2.medium scale embedded systems 3.sophisticated embedded systems
An analog sensor is a device that measures an analog quality (such as temperature, wind speed, sound frequency or velocity). Many of us fail to recognize the difference between qualitative and quantitative measurements. Quantitative descriptors are actually just the result of counting something; seventeen marbles, five folding chairs, three apples... Qualitative descriptors are the result of estimating something; eight cups of sliced apples, a five pound bag of marbles, the current room temperature. When we use a scale to measure something, it's called "qualitative"... or analog. Converters are available that allow a computer to achieve a close approximation of an analog measurement, but for the computer to use the value it must first be converted to a digital signal. Inside the computer, that digital signal is all ones and zeroes, but many of them can be put together to represent a very large number. If that doesn't help, perhaps a basic physics class or even a computer "digital logic" class might be beneficial.
Nanotechnology is the science of things on the nano-scale, or 10^-9 meters. To imagine this scale, think of the relationship between you and your hair, its pretty tiny. Then imagine if your hair grew a proportional sized hair. Now imagine if that hair grew a hair. This is how small nano-scale engineering goes.
to measure electrical enegy
The numbers are leds instead of a needle
It is called the Moh's scale.
The temperature scale that places zero at the point where all atomic and molecular motion ceases is called the Kelvin scale. On the Kelvin scale, this point is defined as absolute zero, which is equivalent to 0 Kelvin (0K).
The zero point on the Kelvin scale is called absolute zero. At this temperature, all molecular motion ceases, and it is equal to -273.15 degrees Celsius.
volume scales as L3
Nanotechnology is the study of manipulating matter on an atomic and molecular scale.
The Kelvin temperature scale is the only scale that begins at absolute zero, which is the point at which all molecular motion ceases.
There's a website you can go to, to get a scale to weigh your packages and then you can print them off the computer. The site is called www.stamps.com.
It is called the magnitude scale. It is a log scale.
The the Fahrenheit value for "absolute zero".
Analog computer
the fujita scale now called the enhanced fujita scale
That sounds like a description of the Internet. There are some other global systems of interconnected computer networks, but none are anywhere NEAR the scale of the Internet.