1.5 stands for 1 and 5/10
5/10 is an equivalent fraction for 1/2
1 half
A half life may or may not be a fraction. The half life of carbon 14, for example, is 5715 years - not really a fraction, unless you are thinking in terms time periods which are much longer than a year.
0.5 is one half, therefore, as a fraction, it is one over two - 1/2.
The remainder is 2-p or 0.5p of the original amount.
Negative half.
1.5 = 1 1/2 (one and a half)
1 half
A half life may or may not be a fraction. The half life of carbon 14, for example, is 5715 years - not really a fraction, unless you are thinking in terms time periods which are much longer than a year.
0.5 is one half, therefore, as a fraction, it is one over two - 1/2.
To calculate the half equivalence point in a titration, you find the volume of titrant added when half of the analyte has reacted. This is typically done by plotting a titration curve and identifying the point where the amount of titrant added is equal to half of the total amount needed to reach the equivalence point.
It equals one half: 0.5=1/2
The equivalence point in a titration is when the amount of titrant added is exactly enough to react completely with the analyte. This is where the reaction is complete. The half equivalence point is when half of the equivalent amount of titrant has been added, leading to a halfway point in the reaction.
375/1000 or 3/8
1/8 of the original amount remains.
The remainder is 2-p or 0.5p of the original amount.
One quarter (1/4) is the fraction that is half of one half (1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4).
1 over 2 is a half as a fraction