The minimum, maximum, and current temperature.
The min and max is when the first derivative , or slope at any point, is zero. For f of x = 2x first derivative is 2, so this is constant slope with no min or max as this is not zero; min is thus negative infinity and max is infinity
the sixth thermometer
Not necessarily.
You take the integral of the sin function, -cos, and plug in the highest and lowest values. Then subtract the latter from the former. so if "min" is the low end of the series, and "max" is the high end of the series, the answer is -cos(max) - (-cos(min)), or cos(min) - cos(max).
150max -125min
No, it lowers both the max and min temperature.
Max - 61.7F Min - 33.4F
Average temperature - min 14.6C max 26.0C:)
MIN. -3 MAX. -10-15
The minimum, maximum, and current temperature.
Min minus 18 Celsius
You can use the SEQUENCE function in Excel to create a series of numbers from max to min or min to max. For example, to create a series from 10 to 1 in descending order, you could use =SEQUENCE(10,1,-1). This formula generates a range of numbers from 10 to 1 in descending order.
The surface temperature of Saturn at 1 bar is 134 Kelvin which equates to -139o Celsius
January Average Temperature: Min 21°C, Average Temperature: Max 36°CAverage Rainfall: 35mm
Compare the readings at the end of the red line.
=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)=MAX(Z1:Z10)/MIN(Z1:Z10)