which power of a telescope might be expressed as "0.5 seconds of arc"?
as power=P=W/t=Fd/t=(10)(10)/10=10Watt
60 W
There are 31,536,000,000,000,000 nano seconds in a year.
dBm is power with reference to 1 milliwatt, expressed on the logarithmic scale (decimals). To compute dBm x, from power P, the following formula is used:x = 10log10(P)This is ten times the logarithm to the base 10 of P.
there might be ways to get the power rating by measuring the size of the resistor. but as the physical size of the resistor increases, its power rating also increases..
Resolving power is measured in arc seconds. The formula to find this is as follows: arc seconds (x) = 11.6/(D) 11.6 is part of the formula D- is the diameter of the telescope (which you have = 25cm) Therefore the resolving power should be: 11.6/25 = .46 arc seconds
Depending on the power of the telescope... anything from ships, planes, coastal scenery and wildlife... to - the moon, stars and galaxies.
A Reflecting telescope has a lot of zooming technologies and the High Power telescope is highly powered.
The light gathering power of a telescope is directly proportional to the area of the objective lens of the telescope.
Magnifying Power
All the planets, depending on the power of the telescope.
No, you can change the magnification of the telescope by simply changing the eyepiece. The two most important powers of the telescope, light-gathering power and resolving power, depend on the diameter of the telescope, but it does not control the magnification.
Expressed
Expressed
That will depend on your telescope power.
Try a 50X or 100X power telescope.
Yes, this is an expressed power of the constitution.