Yes. Although it may not seem like it when the surface is curved, the angles are taken in respect to the "tangent" (derivative) to the curve.
It is a vector. It is the directed straight line distance, or displacement, between two points on the path of movement (even though the actual path may be curved) divided by the actual time taken to move from one point to the other. The reason that it is a vector is that the direction traveled is important: it is possible that part of the motion was in the opposite direction from other parts.
Here are some examples of the word taken in a sentence: She had her picture taken for the yearbook. Who could have taken my car keys? How many college credits have you taken so far?
No, the word 'taken' is the past participle of the verb to take. The past participle is also an adjective. Examples: Verb: I have already taken that course. Adjective: The victims had no proof of their taken property.
9 can be taken from 126 14 times.
its solar system if i wrong can u correct it pls.
The orbit is a stable curved path taken up by a planet or other object around a more massive object.
Well sorry to tell you this but Kagome is IMAGINARY and taken!
The planet that got taken away from the solar system was pluto it was no longer a planet because it circles around the sun differently
In 2006 Pluto was redefined as a "Dwarf planet"; and not a true planet.
The NASA Space Vehicle that have taken video on the planet Mars is called Curiosity, This vehicle has a primary mission of seeing if life is inhabitable on the Red Planet.
The last planet to have its picture taken was Mars, by NASA's Perseverance rover on February 20, 2021. The rover sent back images of its descent and landing on the planet's surface.
A sphere with two slices cut out of it by planes. A torus (doughnut) with a chunk taken out of it.
In general terms a day for a planet is the time taken for the planet to make on rotation on its own axis. Likewise a year for a planet is the time taken for the planet to make one orbit (rotation round) its primary star. Where a planet is tidally locked to its primary, the day length and the year length will be the same, such that the planet keeps one face permanently towards it primary (like the Moon does to the Earth).
Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union and is no longer considered the ninth planet in our solar system.
The orbit.
That is a "year" for that planet.