the answer is zero..anything multiplied by zero gives you zero..
The answer remains infinity
In general, you cannot. An infinite number divided by any non-zero number is still infinite. An infinite number divided by another infinite number may or may not be infinite.
An infinite flat surface, or an infinite surface with zero curvature.
Zero in the normal course of events. You could say you can approximate a circle by an infinite-sided polygon, and then you would have infinite sides and corners. Or you could say a circle has an inside and an outside.
Oh, infinity is a magical concept that goes on forever, like the happy little trees in our paintings. It doesn't have a specific number of zeros because it's not a number we can count like 1, 2, 3. Just remember, in the world of art and numbers, there's always room for infinite possibilities and creativity.
No- Zero goes into zero an infinite number of times.
the answer is zero..anything multiplied by zero gives you zero..
A zero technically has an infinite amount of lines of symmetry.
...because it is an infinite bus bar, meaning it can supply infinite current. By Ohm's law, since the voltage at the bus bar is fixed, to have infinite current, you must have a zero impedance.
the junction is conducting when forward biased, approaching zero resistancethe junction is nonconducting when reverse biased, approaching infinite resistanceneither is exactly zero or infinite
infinite
The answer remains infinity
0. Any number multiplied by zero equals zero.
There are an infinite number of negative numbers before zero.
A two-ton bus would have zero weight in zero gravity, since weight is dependent on the force of gravity. However, gravity has an infinite range, so gravity would only actually be zero at an infinite distance from the source of the gravity.
In general, you cannot. An infinite number divided by any non-zero number is still infinite. An infinite number divided by another infinite number may or may not be infinite.