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A graph which consists of short straight lines which keep changing direction. Example : a graph line which is inclined at say, 30 degrees to a horizontal, then changes direction instantly to a line which is say, inclined at 60 degrees to the horizontal , etc. If the shape of a graph is not a series of straight lines joined to each other, then it is not a step graph.
An example of an inclined plane is a ramp, slanted road, or a slide. An inclined plane is a surface that is at an angle against a horizontal surface.
Any flat surface that is not coplanar with the horizontal plane.
It is simply a plane surface making an angle with the horizontal (ground).
you mean inclined plane? a simple machine (a plane at an incline) that uses gravity and slope to move objects. e.g.: a slide is an inclined plane. If it were horizontal, you wouldn't go anywhere.
the strike
Whether projected horizontally or in an inclined direction ie obliquely the path traversed will be parabolic
A graph which consists of short straight lines which keep changing direction. Example : a graph line which is inclined at say, 30 degrees to a horizontal, then changes direction instantly to a line which is say, inclined at 60 degrees to the horizontal , etc. If the shape of a graph is not a series of straight lines joined to each other, then it is not a step graph.
No. A flat surface which is horizontal is not an inclined plane.
An example of an inclined plane is a ramp, slanted road, or a slide. An inclined plane is a surface that is at an angle against a horizontal surface.
.50g
angel of an inclined plane with the horizontal plane but it is measured with inclined plane is called pitch
The answer depends on the context: If you have a distance vector of magnitude V, that is inclined at an angle q to the horizontal, then the horizontal distance is V*cos(q).
length?
Any flat surface that is not coplanar with the horizontal plane.
-- The component that's inclined 30 degrees above the horizontal is[ 20 sqrt(3) ] = about 34.641 newtons. (rounded)-- The other component is inclined 60 degrees below the horizontal,and its magnitude is 20 newtons.
No, you don't perform CPR on an inclined surface. It must be horizontal, flat, and hard (not deflect while giving compressions).