70%
🎵 then the 🎶 filled in & then the one that isnt filled in
three hundred
It depends on what size bathtub you have.
filled golg wedding ring
70%
4%..............ur welcome
Moats were filled with water and would have slowed down any attempt to take the castle.
The carbon atom's second energy level can hold a maximum of 8 electrons. Carbon has 6 electrons, so the percentage of the second energy level that is filled is 6/8 = 75%.
He said that the attempt was "amateurish."
there is 75% percentage of the whole earth filled with water and 25% percentage with land. hope that helps because i just learned the today on tv
A gumball machine has just been filled with 50 black, 150 white, 100 red and 100 yellow gum balls that have been thoroughly mixed. Sue and Jim, each, purchased one gumball. What is the likelihood both Sue and Jim get red gumballs?
4 liters of oxygen is 100% oxygen because the volume is entirely filled with oxygen.
The likelihood that an atom will bind with another depends on the number and arrangement of its electrons in the outermost energy level. Atoms are more stable when their outermost energy level is filled with electrons, so they will often form bonds to achieve a full outer shell. This can involve sharing, gaining, or losing electrons to achieve stability.
It depends on if they are looking for someone in the position you are lookig for. I filled out my application 3 times. First 2 times I got no response but on my third attempt I filled it out Tuesday night they called me Wednesday morning. Then I had a interview Thursday morning!
? This cannot be easily quantified. transformers normally fail due to excessive through fault current. This does not mean that all transformers that fail explode - most do not, for good reason. An exploding transformer is a danger to anyone in the area. Some oil filled transformers are huge (several hundred tons). Protective devices usually operate fast enough to keep catastrophic failures like you're looking for from happening. If the protection fails to clear faults fast enough, can happen. So the percentage of failures really does not have to do with the transformer (oil filled, gas, whatever kind of transformer) as much as with the protection implemented for that transformer. I've seen two large transformer failures; neither resulted in an explosion. I've also seen an oil filled breaker fail (as a result of incorrect protection), and it did explode. It totalled a vehicle several hundred feet away. So... I'll say "1 in a million" or .0001% would probably be a good, totally unqaulifiable answer.
When heat is applied to a balloon filled with water, the water absorbs some of the heat energy, preventing the balloon from reaching a temperature high enough to burst. The water inside the balloon also helps dissipate the heat more evenly, reducing the likelihood of a rapid increase in pressure that could cause the balloon to pop.