It means that the thing referred to is so tiny that it is immeasurably tiny.
A mathematical point or singularity is an object with zero mass and volume but infinite density. It is a theoretical concept used in physics to represent an infinitesimally small but massive point.
Yes, infinitesimal angular momentum is a vector quantity. It has both magnitude and direction, representing the rotational motion of an object. In the context of calculus and physics, infinitesimal quantities are used to describe changes in vector quantities over infinitesimally small intervals.
The work done by a variable force is calculated by integrating the force function over the distance. Mathematically, it is represented as W = ∫F(x)dx, where W is the work done, F(x) is the force as a function of position, and dx represents an infinitesimally small displacement.
It has plenty of direction. The direction of the electric field at any point in it is the direction of the force that would be felt by an infinitesimally small positive charge placed at that point.
An electromagnetic wave can theoretically have an infinitesimally small wavelength, approaching the Planck length of approximately 1.6 x 10^-35 meters. At this scale, the wave would be interacting at the quantum level and is not currently verifiable by experimental means.
There is an infinitesimally amount of bacteria in the planet.
Kristin's answer to the problem was an infinitesimally small decimal.
No, but the difference is infinitesimally small.
It can be infinitesimally small.
It is infinitesimally small. It the reciprocal of googolplex.
Yes, there are infinitesimally small layers of air.
Make it infinitesimally small.
It is zero. Unless a width is specified, a cross-section is an infinitesimally thin slice across the axis of the object.It is zero. Unless a width is specified, a cross-section is an infinitesimally thin slice across the axis of the object.It is zero. Unless a width is specified, a cross-section is an infinitesimally thin slice across the axis of the object.It is zero. Unless a width is specified, a cross-section is an infinitesimally thin slice across the axis of the object.
Infinitesimally small.
As small as you like. Infinitesimally small.
It will get crushed and compressed into an infinitesimally small size.
No, only an infinitesimally small proportion of them are.