A lever balance is a simple machine used to measure weights by comparing an unknown weight to a known weight. It consists of a bar that pivots on a fulcrum, with the two sides of the bar holding the weights. When the lever is balanced, the weights on each side are equal.
When a lever is balanced, the clockwise torque must equal the counterclockwise torque. This means that the product of the force applied and the distance from the pivot point must be the same on both sides of the lever.
No, weights do not have to be equidistant from the fulcrum to achieve balance. The key factor is the product of the weight and its distance from the fulcrum being equal on both sides of the fulcrum, rather than the distances themselves being equal. This concept is described by the law of the lever, which states that the product of the weight and its distance from the fulcrum is the same on both sides for balance.
A lever balance is used to measure mass by comparing the weight of an object on one side of the lever to a set of known weights on the other side. The lever is adjusted until the two sides are balanced, indicating that the weights are equal and providing the measure of the object's mass.
A Class-1 lever is a lever with the force and the load (resistance) on opposite sides of the fulcrum (pivot).
3 equal sides = equilateral 2 equal sides = isosceles all sides different = scalene
ashape with equal sides
a shape with equal sides
scalene has no equal sides
Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.
A regular pentagon has have equal sides. However, in the same way that a square has four equal sides but you can have a four sided figure with equal sides which is not a square, you can have pentagons that are not regular but do have equal sides. Unlike the quadrilateral, which is called a rhombus, there is no special name for a pentagon that has equal sides but not equal angles.
no, equal sides. if it had equal angles too it would be a square