1/60 of a minute is a second.
Density doesn't tell you the mass or the volume. It only tells you what answer you'll get if you divide the mass by the volume. But whether you have a tiny speck of the substance or a super tanker full of it, the density will be the same.
a small or tiny part, amount, or proportion of something
A cubit is a foot and a half.A cubic foot is ... not something that you can compare to a length. It could be a mile square and a tiny fraction of an inch high; it could be miles high and a tiny fraction of an inch square.
A very, very tiny fraction of the two surfaces are eroded.
The thermosphere, which is located above the mesosphere, contains only a tiny fraction of the atmosphere's mass. Despite its low density, it can reach very high temperatures due to the absorption of solar radiation.
A soap bubble, for example.
Yes, the thermosphere is the uppermost layer of Earth's atmosphere and contains only a tiny fraction of the atmosphere's total mass. It is known for its extremely low density and high temperatures due to the absorption of solar radiation.
No, it is only a tiny fraction. The sun's mass is roughly 330,000 times greater than the Earth.
Yes. If you mean Sagittarius A*, its mass, and even more so its diameter, is only a tiny fraction of the mass, or diameter, of the Milky Way.
The electron has only a small fraction of the mass of the neutron. The neutron is about 1837 times as massive as the electron. The proton is just a tiny bit less massive as the neutron, so the proton and neutron are said to have about the same amount of mass.
The electron has only a small fraction of the mass of the neutron. The neutron is about 1837 times as massive as the electron. The proton is just a tiny bit less massive as the neutron, so the proton and neutron are said to have about the same amount of mass.
The nucleus of an atom is very small compared to the overall size of the atom. It contains protons and neutrons, which make up almost all of the atom's mass, but occupy a tiny fraction of its volume. The rest of the atom is mostly empty space where electrons move around.
The mass of an electron is almost entirely negligible compared to the mass of an atom. I'm not sure if that's the question you were asking, but you can essentially ignore electron mass when calculating the mass of an atom; an electron's mass is only about 0.0005 amu, so even for the heaviest elements the total mass of the electrons is still a tiny fraction of an amu.
No. The galaxy is held together by the mutual gravity of every object in the galaxy. The central black hole accounts for only a tiny fraction of that mass.
Most of the mass of the Earth is in the mantle, most of the rest in the core; the part we inhabit is a tiny fraction of the whole
A bird's nest typically contains a tiny egg.