A single human hair can typically withstand a maximum tensile strength of about 100 grams before breaking. The exact amount can vary depending on factors such as the individual's hair thickness and health.
No, thickness and density are not the same. Thickness refers to the distance between two opposite sides of an object or material, while density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume. In other words, thickness is a linear measurement, while density is a mass/volume measurement.
Cardboard is not particularly strong compared to other materials like metal or plastic. Its strength depends on its thickness and how it's used. It is commonly used for packaging and storing items but may not be suitable for heavy-duty applications.
Beta is not typically used in determining paper thickness. Paper thickness is usually measured in terms of caliper, which is the thickness of a single sheet of paper expressed in thousandths of an inch or micrometers. Factors such as paper weight, density, and formation contribute to the thickness of paper.
Yes, a 2 kg iron brick has twice as much mass as a 1 kg iron brick. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, so doubling the mass means doubling the amount of matter present in the object.
To determine how much mortar you need for your project, calculate the area to be covered and the thickness of the mortar layer. Multiply the area by the thickness to find the volume of mortar needed.
That depends on the thickness of the cement, the strength of the cement, the age of it, Is it reinforced
thickness of sch160 is abt.5.5mm
That would depend on many factors - the surface area of the table the thickness of the table the strength of the legs - and so the question cannot be answered without much more detail being provided.
dubl it
Convert the thickness to meters, then multiply base x area. Answer is in cubic meters. Alternately, you can also convert everything to decimeters first, or to centimeters.
No that is not possible Obviously 'doubling' is twice as much. Twice the ingredients and twice the work equals twice the results. Do it times a 1000 and you have 1000 times the results!
To calculate the volume of concrete needed for a slab, you can use the formula: Volume = Area × Thickness. First, convert the thickness from inches to feet: 4 inches is 1/3 feet. Then, multiply the area (256 square feet) by the thickness (1/3 feet): 256 × (1/3) = approximately 85.33 cubic feet of concrete is needed for the slab.
too much strength is when you excercise, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
If you keep doubling it for one month, you will already have 10737413,11 dollars.
You should use the same amount as called for in the recipe. According to Cooks Illustrated, imitation Vanilla has a *lot* more vanillin than real vanilla will have. Apparently, to be normal strength vanilla, you can only have so much vanilla. There's double-strength vanilla, too, which is what I prefer to use.
That depends on how thick you want it. Multiply 18ft * 18ft * thickness (in units of feet). That will give you your volume in cubic feet. To convert it to cubic yards divide your answer by 27.