yes , cause inches and centimeters are two different measurements .
The accuracy of a measurement does not depend on the weight being measured. Instead, accuracy is a measure of how close a measured value is to the true or expected value. To determine the accuracy of a measurement in pounds, you would need to compare the measured weight of 20570 pounds to the actual weight or reference standard.
It means the measurement of physical attributes or characteristics using the metric system.
Energy is measured in joules. Sometimes the older unit "calorie" is used instead - this is a unit defined on the basis of heat, but it is still a unit of energy.
WAE intensity, or Wind-Affected Evaporation intensity, is not typically measured in meters. Instead, it is commonly expressed in terms of rate, such as millimeters per hour or liters per square meter per day, which indicates the volume of water evaporated over a given area and time. Meters would not be an appropriate unit for this specific measurement.
The eruption in Montserrat in 1995 was a catastrophic event but it did not have a specific Richter scale measurement because the scale is typically used to measure earthquakes, not volcanic eruptions. Instead, volcanic eruptions are typically measured using the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) which gives a sense of the eruption's intensity and explosiveness.
The accuracy of a measurement does not depend on the weight being measured. Instead, accuracy is a measure of how close a measured value is to the true or expected value. To determine the accuracy of a measurement in pounds, you would need to compare the measured weight of 20570 pounds to the actual weight or reference standard.
No. "pi" is the 'ratio' of circumference to diameter of a circle. It doesn't care what the unit is,just as long as both are measured in the same unit.
Hectograms are a measurement of mass, and centimeters are a measurement of distance, so there isn't a valid answer to your question. But if you meant to type hectoMETER instead of hectogram, then the answer is that there is one ten-thousandth (1/10000) of a hectometer in a centimeter. 1cm=0.0001hm 1hm=10,000cm
Qualitative measurement is a method used to describe characteristics or attributes instead of quantifying them numerically. It focuses on qualities such as color, texture, taste, and appearance, providing descriptive information rather than numerical data.
It is usually measured on milliliters. For example, an antialergic syrup has approximately 10 milliliters each dose. For some special kind of medicine it is advisable that it be measured on drops instead milliliters. decimal measurements is the most used for medicine dosages.
It means the measurement of physical attributes or characteristics using the metric system.
A measurement scale that has no meaningful zero is called an interval scale. In this type of scale, the difference between values is significant, but the zero point does not indicate the absence of the quantity being measured. An example of an interval scale is temperature measured in Celsius or Fahrenheit, where zero does not signify a complete lack of heat. Instead, it is simply an arbitrary point on the scale.
No because pi is a ratio. Exactly. You could measure it in Pan-Galactic Gargle Blasters and it would still have the same value. JHC!
Sure. You can measure it in miles or light-years instead if you like and don't mind dealing with inconveniently small numbers. None of these are a particularly natural unit for pencil measurement, though.
No, but you could use a ruler instead.
Energy is measured in joules. Sometimes the older unit "calorie" is used instead - this is a unit defined on the basis of heat, but it is still a unit of energy.
Yeah