Perspective
at least 10 dimension for the equation to start working
Meter is a linear measure and has one dimension. Volume is a three dimensional measure and has three dimensions. You can add meters to meters but only cubic meters to cubic meters.
If the painter spends 3 hours working on a painting, and the sculptor works for ( \frac{2}{3} ) as long, you can calculate the sculptor's time by multiplying 3 hours by ( \frac{2}{3} ). This gives ( 3 \times \frac{2}{3} = 2 ) hours. Therefore, the sculptor works for 2 hours on the sculpture.
The 5th Dimension
If the working drawings are what is used to manufacture the object then there should be no difference. There will be more detail given in the working drawing but they would be engineering tolerances.
Scientists have been and are still working hard to check on different dimensions and if travelling is actually possible between dimensions.
Solomon Saprid was a modern Philippine sculptor. He was known for his working with different types of bronze and scrap metals.
1 cubic yard has 3 dimensions which, when multiplied together, yield '1' yd3 or 27 ft3. Working in feet, the one given dimension is "2 inches" = 1/6 ft. So the area ... the product of the remaining 2 dimensions ... is 27 / (1/6) = 27 x 6 = 162 ft2.
The first dimension, known as hygiene factors, involves the presence or absence of job dissatisfacters, such as wages, working environment, rules and regulations, and supervisors.
Maybe, I am a friend of Arnas, he's working on SSW17 at the moment an I'm making a spin-off of Cosmic Dimensions.
It varys among schools you make work for or the job corparation you are working for.. if you apply for a certain sculping job this is a good question to ask
Depends what you mean by "dimension", since there are several definitions of the word. In mathematics, there are an infinite number of dimensions, since (for the most part, except in geometry) dimension simply refers to an array of numbers or co-ordinates. It is therefore possible to construct a graph (or build a co-ordinate system) with any number of "dimensions". Many branches of mathematics deal with these higher co-ordinate structures. In geometry, dimension has a similar definition to the physical sense, but again an infinite number of dimensions are available, since these do not necessarily refer to "real world" applications. Euclidean geometry deals with 2-dimensional spaces, while non-Euclidean geometries deal with 3, 4 or more "dimensions" of object.In physics (the sense I think you mean) the question is still somewhat open. Originally we believed there were only three, but Einstein demonstrated that time was another dimension, and thus established that there were four (three spatial and one time). Recently, certain problems in physics have suggested that even "higher" dimensions exist. These dimensions are purely (as far as we know) spatial, but are "wrapped up" tightly around themselves, and are thus invisible and undetectable in most situations.Depending on which theory you go for, there could be five, eight, or even eleven dimensions out there. The current strongest candidate (but far from proven yet) is M-Theory, which holds that there are 11 spatial dimensions, wrapped up into what are called Calabi-Yau manifolds, like little knots at every point in space-time.These dimensions will never be "viewed" by human eyes, even if proven or otherwise detected, since our entire sensory system is built around 3 perceivable spatial dimensions, and thus we would have no frame of reference to understand what we would be seeing.We operate in three dimensions, plus time. That's four. But there can be more. In mathematics, any number of dimensions can be managed (or attempted, at least). Theoretical physicists are currently working with a dozen or so in what are called manifolds in an attempt to understand reality as we know it. The number of dimensions will vary as the individual who is manipulating them or working in them. Usually the x, y, z axes and time are sufficient for most of us.This is an interesting question in contemporary physics. Albert Einstein described the universe as existing in 4 dimensional space-time, but M-theory (an extension of string theory) postulates that there are 11 space-time dimensions.(P.S. How many dimensions are there?)One. Unless in the future humans create a device which can create others.