A typical worker ant would weigh between approx 1*10^-5 and 5*10^-5 Newtons.
000009 km in Scientific Notation = 9E-05 x 105km
For an ant farm, I would suggest a kilogram. For an individual ant, a milligram.
Milligrams. 1/1000th of a gram.
An ant would be measured in millimeters. An ant that is over a centimeter long would be an unusually large species (such as the Dinoponera of the Amazon which reaches 3 cm or 30 mm). At a meter long, it would be the size of a medium to large dog. At a kilometer it would cover several city blocks.
To determine the contrapositive of the statement "If it is an ant, then it is an insect," we first need to rephrase it in logical terms: "If P (it is an ant), then Q (it is an insect)." The contrapositive would be "If not Q (it is not an insect), then not P (it is not an ant)." You would need to analyze Figures A and B to see which one correctly illustrates this relationship.
000009 km in Scientific Notation = 9E-05 x 105km
You should use kilograms. * * * * * That is so wrong! A kilogram is a measure of mass, not of weight. Also, you would need over 300,000 ants to have a mass of 1 kilogram! The basic unit for weight is Newtons, You could use a Newton, with scientific notation, to allow for the fact that an ant weights so little. Or a micronewton. An ordinary household ant will weigh approx 30 micronewtons.
classification on driver ant
3 milligrams is the weight of an average ant.
camponotus
yes. the ant can carry things heavier than its weight
the cientific name for an ant is hymenoptera
it will definitety have a scientific name
The scientific name of a honey pot ant is Myrmecocystus.
My name abdul razzaq
Acromyrmex and Atta
Lasius niger = black ant (black garden ant)