The term that springs to mind is LAW.
It is formula of which the plural is formulae
Predicting the weather for the next day (or week) means using complex equations based on temperature, air pressure, humidity, etc. When a weatherman says, "a cold front is moving in to the northeast," that means there were quantitative (numerical) measurements taken, then interpreted using mathematical formulas.
In an argument based on mathematics the conclusion is claimed to depend largely and entirely on some mathematical calculation or measurement.
farce *;
A square pyramid.If you would like to be abstruse you could call it the first Johnson solid (a non-uniform convex polyhedron).
Axiom
It is a formula of which formulae is its plural.
Okay I have had trouble with this one but the correct answer is scientific laws.It is a formula of which formulae is its plural.
It is formula of which the plural is formulae
The equations of motions.
Scientific Law.
It could be termed a "law".
work = force x distance time = distance : time power = work : time force = ?
Scientific laws. Scientific laws. Scientific laws. Scientific laws.
I'm guessing that you're talking about a Law of Physics. Laws are typically described using mathematical equations. Like newton's second law: F=ma (force=mass*acceleration) Theories, on the other hand are usually just a description or explanation of behavior, like how light can behave like a wave and a particle.
Mathematical sciences are a wide array of sciences that are based on mathematical principles.
It is a software and it's known as a multimedia software originally designed by Macro-media that has spawned a whole new genre of websites with fast, vector-based animation (uses mathematical equations to ensure they scale correctly based on monitor size) and sound.