If, by constant you mean the value c in the equation of a line in the form y = mx + c, then the intercept c, is at (0,c). that is, it is the point where the line crosses the y axis.
That's a circle. The "fixed point" is the center of the circle, and the constant distance is its radius.
equilibrium constant
The solubility constant.
Any equation parallel to the x-axis is of the form:y = constant In this case, you can figure out the constant from the given point.
At a constant pressure, the freezing point is always going to be lower than the boiling point.
If, by constant you mean the value c in the equation of a line in the form y = mx + c, then the intercept c, is at (0,c). that is, it is the point where the line crosses the y axis.
If you add the same constant to each element of a sample then the mean of this collection of values will be the mean of the original sample plus the constant. If you multiply each element of a sample by a constant then the mean of this collection of values will be the mean of the original sample multiplied by the constant.
Constant Velocity
the answer is translation, i had to know the answer to that question for a worksheet
The molar freezing point constant (Kf) is a physical constant that represents the amount by which the freezing point of a solvent is lowered for each mole of solute dissolved in it. It is specific to each solvent and is used in calculating the freezing point depression in colligative properties.
Nothing about a series circuit is necessarily constant. You may be thinking of the current, which is the same number at any point in a series circuit. That doesn't mean that it can't change. But if it does change, it'll change at every point, and still be the same number everywhere in the series circuit.
That's a circle. The "fixed point" is the center of the circle, and the constant distance is its radius.
The freezing point depression constant for naphthalene is approximately 6.80 °C/m.
Constant is a number with no variables. For an example, 12a, but this is a constant 12.
equilibrium constant
The solubility constant.