The point where the diagonals meet.
The angle of rotation of a square refers to the degrees it can be rotated around its center without changing its appearance. A square can be rotated by 90 degrees, 180 degrees, 270 degrees, or 360 degrees and still look the same. Therefore, the angles of rotation that maintain the square's symmetry are multiples of 90 degrees.
centre it and that is the answer
you can find center of earth by using only the formulas
rotation
Yes
Where the diagonals meet. Also where the perpendicular bisectors of the sides meet.
The angle of rotation of a square refers to the degrees it can be rotated around its center without changing its appearance. A square can be rotated by 90 degrees, 180 degrees, 270 degrees, or 360 degrees and still look the same. Therefore, the angles of rotation that maintain the square's symmetry are multiples of 90 degrees.
I think you mean the centrifugal force. That force points outwards from the center of rotation.
Yes. A tornado has a center of rotation.
To calculate the GD² value for an agitator, you need to determine the mass (G) of the agitator and the square of the distance (D) from the center of rotation to the mass's center of gravity. The formula is GD² = G × D². First, measure or estimate the mass of the agitator components, then calculate the distance from the center of rotation to the center of gravity for each component, square that distance, and multiply by the mass. Sum the GD² values of all components to get the total GD² for the agitator.
Internal rotation refers to the rotation towards the axis of the body. External rotation refers to the rotation away from the center of the body.
centre it and that is the answer
It is called a rotation.
you can find center of earth by using only the formulas
4
Center of rotation
rotation