Take the 'reciprocal' of the given scale factor to go the other way. The 'reciprocal' of a number is 1/(the number). 3 ==> 1/3 5 ==> 1/5 1/7 ==> 7 2/3 ==> 3/2 etc.
Case number would be nominal scale; the number has no meaning.
86% would be 2.58 on a 3-point scale.
124
About 1.0023 on the Richter Scale.
Take the 'reciprocal' of the given scale factor to go the other way. The 'reciprocal' of a number is 1/(the number). 3 ==> 1/3 5 ==> 1/5 1/7 ==> 7 2/3 ==> 3/2 etc.
The scale is hundreds.
Topaz is number 8 on the Mohs scale.
The number 6 is not a natural number on the pH scale if that is what you mean. In fact the number 7 is a natural and neutral number on the pH scale ( on the pH scale number 7 is a green colour.)
The highest number on the Richter scale is theoretically infinite, but in practice it usually does not exceed 9.5. The lowest number on the Richter scale is 1.0.
Number 3 behind China and India. Population = 314,022,000
Because of the Richter Scale's logarithmic properties, a number 5 earthquake is 100 times more severe than a number 3 earthquake.
It is but a convention. In theory, you can put the number scale in any orientation.
A broken scale is a symbol used when a scale on the graph starts at a big number. It can be used on the x and y axis. It looks like the number 3 but with straight lines so it is a zig-zag and is places ON the axis line eg if the scale on the y axis starts at 324, you would write zero then the broken scale ON the line then 324.
The highest number on the pH scale is 14. The pH scale goes from 0 to 14.
Earthquakes are the events whose magnitude is expressed as a number on the Richter Scale.
In the short scale, 999 trillion is 999,000,000,000,000, and the number after that is 999,000,000,000,001. In the long scale, 999 trillion is 999,000,000,000,000,000,000, and the number after that is 999,000,000,000,000,000,001. Adding either one thousand (in the short scale) or one million (in the long scale) gives a quadrillion (1,000,000,000,000,000 - short scale, 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 - long scale).