Wiki User
∙ 11y agothey are expressions
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoIn place value, a period is each group of three digits separated by commas in a multidigit number.
The relationship between log(period) and log(length) is linear, with slope 0.5 and intercept log(2*pi/sqrt(g))
There's no relationship between the length of the pendulum and the number of swings.However, a shorter pendulum has a shorter period, i.e. the swings come more often.So a short pendulum has more swings than a long pendulum has in the same amountof time.
T=1/2l
Taking an example 123456789 It becomes 123,456,789 NB The commas separate every 'thousand' . NNB A full stop/period is only used for decimals.
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
In place value, a period is each group of three digits separated by commas in a multidigit number.
commas
The period (T) is the time taken for one complete cycle of a wave, while frequency (f) is the number of cycles that occur in one second. The relationship between period and frequency is given by: f = 1 / T This means that frequency is inversely proportional to period.
commas
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
The relationship between the planet's SPEED and its distance from the Sun is given by Kepler's Third Law.From there, it is fairly easy to derive a relationship between the period of revolution, and the distance.
frequency. Period is the time it takes for one complete cycle of the wave, while frequency is the number of cycles per second. The relationship between period and frequency is that period = 1/frequency.
The period of a wave is the time it takes for one complete cycle to occur, while the frequency is the number of cycles that occur in one second. The relationship between period and frequency is inverse, meaning that as the period increases, the frequency decreases, and vice versa. This can be mathematically demonstrated by the equation: frequency = 1/period.
the planets
No, there is not.
comas