"Zone" 0? No, that is the blackest black that can be produced in a black & white print. The whitest white is zone 10.
Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.
Absolute zero is defined as 0 Kelvin and is equivalent to −273.15 °C
It's purely by definition. The absolute value of a real number, x, is defined as:- * +x, if x >= 0 * -x, if x < 0 There is nothing more sinister to it than just that's what "absolute" is defined to mean.
The absolute temperature scale was defined by Lord Kelvin.
The absolute threshold for hearing is arbitrarily defined as zero; decibels.
No. The absolute value of a number is always positive, or zero. The way the absolute value is defined, it can never be negative.No. The absolute value of a number is always positive, or zero. The way the absolute value is defined, it can never be negative.No. The absolute value of a number is always positive, or zero. The way the absolute value is defined, it can never be negative.No. The absolute value of a number is always positive, or zero. The way the absolute value is defined, it can never be negative.
The absolute value of a number is defined conceptually as its distance from 0. The absolute value of a complex number is therefore defined by the distance formula: |z| = sqrt(re(z)2 - im(z)2) 0 is a complex number, as is proven as follows: A complex number is a number of the form x + yi, where x and y are numbers. 0i = 0. 0 = 0 + 0. 0 = 0 + 0i. 0 = x + yi where x and y are 0. 0 is a number. Therefore, 0 is a complex number. As such, the distance formula can be used to calculate |0|: |0| = sqrt(re(0)2 - im(0)2) = sqrt(02 - 02) = sqrt(0 - 0) = sqrt(0) = 0
That is how the absolute value is defined. For x < 0 the value of x is negative (by definition). Therefore, the value of negative x is positive (negative of a negative). So abs(x) = -x when x < 0
Absolute zero in Kelvin is defined as 0 degrees. This is -273.15 degrees celcius. It was determined by extrapolating the gas and pressure of an ideal gas as it approaches the point where all of its particles stop vibrating. The closest we have gotten to absolute zero is 10^-15 degrees kelvin. Hope that helps.
Because absolute zero (or 0k) is the point at which EVERYTHING freezes. More specifically, absolute zero is defined to be the point where there is no energy. You can't have less than no energy.
|x|, the absolute value of x, is defined as follows: |x| = x if x ≥ 0 |x| = -x if x < 0 The characteristics are: |x| ≥ 0 |x| = 0 => x = 0 For any two numbers x and y, |x*y| = |x|*|y| |x+y| ≤ |x|+|y|
the answer is 0. absolute value changes negitives to positives