0.5
It depends. If the division is wider than an ordinary pencil then it is a centimetre. If it is much narrower than that then it is a millimetre.
That would be a nanometer.
centimeter
Yes, there are two types if division measurement division and rational division they are both different in the smallest of ways.
0.5
The smallest division is 1mm (one milli metre). There 1000 divisions of 1mm in a 1 m (one metre) rule.
It depends. If the division is wider than an ordinary pencil then it is a centimetre. If it is much narrower than that then it is a millimetre.
The thickness of a book will normally be smaller than the smallest graduations on the metre rule.
The least count of a metric rule is determined by the smallest division on the scale of the ruler. To calculate the least count, divide the smallest marked division on the ruler by the total number of subdivisions between two main unit markings. For example, if a ruler has millimeter divisions with half-millimeter markings between each millimeter, the least count would be 0.5 mm.
-- analog ohm-meter -- analog power meter -- analog audio level meter -- slide-rule multiplication/division scales -- slide-rule tangent/cotangent scales -- analog tuning dial on an AM radio
Smallest Division is "KARACHI",,,,,,
what is the value of the smallest division on a ammeter
what is the value of the smallest division on a ammeter
meter
A millimeter is normally the smallest division on a metric rule, one tenth of a centimeter, one thousand to a meter (and hopefully you are not looking at a non-metric ruler).
0 is smallest primary voltage division