The drawing shows a version of the loop-the-loop trick designed for small objects.
To calculate density, you need the object's mass and volume. As the object shown is not described, its density cannot be determined without this information.
The mass of an object can be determined using a balance or a scale. Simply place the object on the balance or scale and record the reading shown. This reading will give you the mass of the object.
When an object is up close to a concave mirror, the mirror will reflect an enlarged and upright virtual image of the object. The image will appear behind the mirror, and the size and orientation will depend on the distance of the object from the mirror's focal point.
The most common forces shown in a diagram are gravity, normal force, tension, friction, and applied force. These forces act on an object to influence its motion or determine its equilibrium.
An object must be revolved 90 degrees to be viewed orthographically. Orthographic views are typically shown from the front, back, top, bottom, left, and right sides of an object, each requiring a 90-degree rotation.
It would be more correct to use "in" than "on". But rather than using "drawing" it might be better to use the word "illustration" or "figure" unless you were referring to an actual drawing as a piece of artwork.
Shown in drawing and shown on drawing can mean the same thing. These statements would both indicate that the concept is shown somewhere within the drawing.
A drawing that shows a real object with accurate sizes reduced or enlarged by a certain amount (called the scale). The scale is shown as the length in the drawing, then a colon (":"), then the matching length on the real thing.
No, a multiview projection is used for developing a multiview drawing. Multiview projections are orthographic projection where the object is behind the plane of projection, and is oriented such that only two of its dimensions are shown.
It depends on what version and in what country. The US version is shown on Fox. The UK version is shown on ITV.
The theatrical version is what is shown in theaters and extended version is extra things that were not shown in theaters
The answer depends on information shown in the drawing. No answer is possible, since the drawing is not visible from here.
13 sides
.125 STOCK
To calculate density, you need the object's mass and volume. As the object shown is not described, its density cannot be determined without this information.
Unfortunately there is no drawing so the question cannot be answered
Without the "object" it is impossible to answer this question.