Typically about 1:100 (vertical to horizontal).
A stationary front
Yes. The type of front has to do with the difference in temperature between two areas, not the actual temperature. If it was 120° in an area and a front moved in that was 100° it would be a cold front.
A blue triangle.The cold front symbol is a line with triangles on one sidea line with triangels on top
f*** serbia haha ...
Cold Front
I believe it is a cold front
big horse dick
Cold Front-When a fast moving cold air mass runs into a slowly moving warm air mass Warm Front-A fast moving warm air mass collides with a slow moving cold air mass Stationary Front-When a cold and a warm air mass meet, but neither one has enough force to move the other Occluded Front-When a warm air was is caught between two cold air masses
Well u the equation is in slope intercept form so as long as the coefficient in front of y is one then the coefficient in front of x is the slope in ur case the slope is 8.6
warmer than a cold front and colder than a cold front
Stratus clouds and drizzly rain :)
Stratus clouds and drizzly rain :)
The slope is -7. If the equation is of the form y = mx , the slope is simply m, the number in front of x.
the normal force is acting on the sled-- it's what keeps the sled from falling through the slope
Glacis - an artificial slope of earth used in late European fortresses
Glacis - an artificial slope of earth used in late European fortresses
There was no "front" in the Cold War.