Just imagine...
You are an architect. You come home late in the evening. You're hungry and you decide to fry eggs with bacon. And while cooking you have a great idea: "Why don't I calculate a logarithm of a matrix 8x8?.."
(you have to know what is durable how it can be affected and what will survive in the everyday life You will have to know what materials you can use, what will be strong, how it will be affected, how it willl affect people also it has a lot to do with science.)
Yes it is because architects are not allowed to design whatever and however they want. It is not like painting or composing. Architects use their minds more than their hearts. Sure they use their hearts but not more than a scientist else in a different field.
it might be less dense
I suppose that the contents of a black box are as mysterious as the intellectual content of science, at least to those who are not trained as scientists. People just use a black box, and they use science, without necessarily understand how these things work.
Electricity is a form of energy that is studied in the field of science, particularly physics. However, the application and use of electricity in devices and technologies make it a crucial component of technology as well.
A Bunsen burner is commonly used to heat things in a science laboratory. It produces a single open flame and can be adjusted in temperature by controlling the gas flow.
Yes, architects use science in various ways, particularly in understanding materials, structural integrity, and environmental factors. They apply principles of physics and engineering to ensure buildings are safe, functional, and sustainable. Additionally, knowledge of environmental science helps architects design structures that are energy-efficient and environmentally friendly. Overall, science plays a crucial role in the architectural design and construction process.
architects use coordinate planes to graph where they want the rooms to be
Architects use triangles as part of their work in designing buildings. And finding the pygratheim therom and stuff.
Architects use scientific notation to compute very large or very small numbers.
Architects use the Pythagorean theorem to check distances, heights, etc...that cant be measured
yes they do
architects
I'm no engineer but my science teacher said today that most architects/engineers use reinforced concrete for winds.
Architects use fractions every day in their designs. Fractional measurements are a major part of any design or building.
They use it to measure angles and lengths
architects
quadratic formula