A common everyday example of double displacement reaction is when you brush your teeth using toothpaste. The fluoride ions in the toothpaste react with the calcium ions in your teeth to form a compound that strengthens tooth enamel. This is a double displacement reaction where the ions in the toothpaste and the ions in your teeth switch partners to form a new compound.
You can try wiggling the "baby tooth" (if it doesn't hurt to do so) until it is loose enough to come out - most baby teeth have very short roots. If this doesn't work you need to see a dentist, the remaining baby tooth will cause displacement and over crowding of your new permanent teeth.
Two types of displacement reactions are known:- single displacement- double displacement
another displacement
The only case in which the magnitude of displacement and displacement are exactly the same is when the displacement occurs in a straight line. In such a scenario, the magnitude of displacement (distance between initial and final positions) will be equal to the displacement (change in position) as there is no change in direction.
To calculate displacement from a displacement graph, find the area under the curve. If the graph is a straight line, you can subtract the initial position from the final position. If the graph is not a straight line, calculate the integral of the graph to determine the total displacement.
the whole tooth and nothing but the tooth
The tooth in question is a tooth that children have. If it is not a permanent tooth, it could be called a milk tooth.
Displacement is the shortest distance travelled . formula of Displacement= speed * time in meters
What is your engine's displacement? Many refugees do not survive their displacement by war.
Displacement
tooth's - as in "A tooth's root extends down into the jawbone."