Yes it does. X can be halved in more than one way, making this letter highly capable of having rotational symmetry.
A parallelogram.
hi
A zero of a function is where it crosses the X-Axis. Multiple zeroes mean that the function crosses the X-Axis more than once. They are also known as roots.
it is really easy: 1: you need a shape. 2: You just turn the shape. if you want rotational symmetry: 1: you need a shape that if you rotate it more than once it will look the same, like an equillateral triangle. 2: you rotate it until it looks the same as it did before. 3: rotational symmetry is only true if the item can be rotated more than once and still look the same.
Yes, one object can have more than one rotational inertia depending on the axis of rotation. The rotational inertia of an object depends not only on its mass and shape, but also on the axis around which it is rotating. Different axes of rotation can result in different rotational inertias for the same object.
No. For the rotational inertia, the distribution of masses is relevant. Mass further from the axis of rotation contributes more to the rotational inertial than mass that is closer to it.
If an object is rotating about a different axis than its center of mass, it will experience both rotational and translational motion. The object will have an angular velocity around the axis of rotation, as well as a linear velocity in the direction perpendicular to the axis of rotation. The motion can be described using both rotational and translational kinematics.
Saturn's rotational period is just over ten hours. This means that it does spin on its axis much faster than Earth, especially considering its larger size.
Yes it does. X can be halved in more than one way, making this letter highly capable of having rotational symmetry.
Rather than being perpendicular to the orbital plane of the Earth around the sun, the rotational axis of the Earth is tilted. This is the reason we have seasons.
not possible
A parallelogram.
yes, it has a rotational symmetry of 180 degrees, and of course 360. like if you flipped it upside down, then put it on top of the other one it would look the same. just not a lowercase.
Venus has a very slow rotational period, taking about 243 Earth days to complete one rotation on its axis. This is longer than the time it takes Venus to orbit the Sun.
axes
The allies had more navy and air force and the axis had more military