(c + 1/3) yards.
approx 1.25 c/yards
1 yard is 3 ft
Well, since, at 1 atmosphere of pressure, it take roughly 848 cubic feet of gaseous hydrogenat 23 degrees C to equal 1 cubic foot of liquid hydrogen at -252.8 degrees C,one could easily deduce that 1 SCF of gaseous hydrogen would theoretically equal 1/848 SCF of liquid hydrogen, or just bareld over 2 cubic inches.
No.Neither are commutative: a - b does not equal b - a, and a/b does not equal b/a.Neither is associative: (a - b) - c does not equal a - (b - c), and (a/b)/c does not equal a/(b/c).Examples of these are:4 - 2 does not equal 2 - 4.1/3 does not equal 3/1.(6 - 5) - 1 does not equal 6 - (5 - 1).(10/2)/2 does not equal 10/(2/2).
5 yards is 15 feet. Also, known as 15 rulers. B/C there are 12 inches in a ruler and 12 inches in a foot. Get it? I hope you do because this answer is right. TRUST ME!
1 yard = 3 feet so 3 x 4 = 12 feet. or ab = c when a = feet and b = yards ( or vice versa) and c = answer
It is simply 1/c Anything to the first power is equal to itself.
1 degree Celsius is equal to 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
C = 2*pi*r = 6.28 yards approx.
The closest measurement of the three is 18 yards. There are 0.9144 metres in one yard, therefore, rounded to two decimal places, 18 metres is equal to 18/0.9144 = 19.69 yards.
32 foot circumference (C) * 1 foot deep = (C2 / (4 * pi)) * 1 = 81.487 cubic feet 609.57 gallons (US) 507.57 gallons (imp)
The only way this could be true is under one of the following conditions:a, b and c are all equal to zerob is equal to 1 and a is equal to cb is equal to -1 and a is equal to -cConsider:ab = cbc = aFirst, plug the second equation into the first one to find the value of b:(bc)(b) = cb2c = cb2 = 1b = ±1Now take those values and plug it into either equation:(1)(c) = ac = aor:(-1)(c) = ac = -aTo prove that the absolute values of c and a must be identical:Given:ab = cbc = aThen:ab/c = 1bc/a = 1Therefore:ab/c = bc/aa2b = bc2a2 = c2|a| = |c|