So, the first question is: how many meters are 10 nm?
1nm =<span>0.000000001 m.
So 10 nanometers are </span><span>0.00000001 m!
Now, how many milimeter are those?
let's start with meters, 1 meter are 1000 milimeters.
so </span>
0.00000001*1000=0.<span><span>00001</span> m!
now, micrometers .1 micrometer are 1000 nanometers.
so 10 nanometers are 0.01 micrometers! (1 nanometer is 0.001 micrometers)
</span>
Answer:
His machine must increase
Explanation:
If all the sides are equal, then it is an equilateral triangle. This means after walking 100 meters, you had to turn 1/3 of 180 degrees (because that's what the interior angles of the triangle add up to).
So, 180 * 1/3 = 60 degrees.
We aren't done yet.
60 degrees is not the angle which you have turned from your path.
You turned 120 degrees to describe an angle of 60 degrees on the interior side.
The answer is B.
You're a little late. But if you want some short, quick rules, then these are
a couple that I would take in with me (stored only in my brain, of course):
-- If something is not accelerating or moving at all, then all the forces on it
must add up to zero. That could even mean a hanging rope.
-- In a vertical rope, the tension in it is the same everywhere in the rope.
The tension is the weight of whatever is hanging from the bottom.
That's really all I'm sure of, based on your hazy, fuzzy description of
what you've been doing in class. I don't want to get into things that
you might not have learned yet, and confuse you.