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A graph which consists of short straight lines which keep changing direction. Example : a graph line which is inclined at say, 30 degrees to a horizontal, then changes direction instantly to a line which is say, inclined at 60 degrees to the horizontal , etc. If the shape of a graph is not a series of straight lines joined to each other, then it is not a step graph.
An example of an inclined plane is a ramp, slanted road, or a slide. An inclined plane is a surface that is at an angle against a horizontal surface.
Any flat surface that is not coplanar with the horizontal plane.
It is simply a plane surface making an angle with the horizontal (ground).
By the definition, A plane which makes an angle (THETA) with the horizontal is said to be inclined plane. Inclined plane has made lots of work very easy. It's a simple machine.
the strike
A graph which consists of short straight lines which keep changing direction. Example : a graph line which is inclined at say, 30 degrees to a horizontal, then changes direction instantly to a line which is say, inclined at 60 degrees to the horizontal , etc. If the shape of a graph is not a series of straight lines joined to each other, then it is not a step graph.
No. A flat surface which is horizontal is not an inclined plane.
The horizontal motion of a projectile is typically considered as uniform motion, meaning the object moves at a constant velocity without any acceleration in the horizontal direction. This motion is not affected by gravity and only changes due to external forces like air resistance.
An example of an inclined plane is a ramp, slanted road, or a slide. An inclined plane is a surface that is at an angle against a horizontal surface.
.50g
In structural geology, pitch is the inclination of a planar feature (such as a bedding plane or fault) measured perpendicular to its strike direction. It describes the steepness of the feature as it dips into the Earth's subsurface. Pitch is often represented as an angle measured from the horizontal plane.
The answer depends on the context: If you have a distance vector of magnitude V, that is inclined at an angle q to the horizontal, then the horizontal distance is V*cos(q).
No, the inclined plane does not change the direction of the force. It only changes the direction of the force component that acts parallel to the plane, but the overall force vector remains in the same direction.
length?
Any flat surface that is not coplanar with the horizontal plane.
-- The component that's inclined 30 degrees above the horizontal is[ 20 sqrt(3) ] = about 34.641 newtons. (rounded)-- The other component is inclined 60 degrees below the horizontal,and its magnitude is 20 newtons.