Measurements and Mathematics Terms
(mathematics is the deductive study of quantities, magnitudes, and shapes as determined by the use of numbers and symbols while every branch of science and engineering depends on mathematics; measurement is the process of associating numbers with physical quantities and phenomena and measurement is fundamental to the sciences; to engineering, construction, and other technical fields; and to almost all everyday activities)
When Alice was looking for a job, she searched for one in an 8 mile radius from her home.
The famous author was producing new novels at the rate of three a year.
- Take any three-digit number in which the first digit is larger then the last digit (654).
- Reverse the number and subtract the smaller number from the larger one (456; 654 - 456 = 198).
- Reverse the result and add this number to the result (198 reversed = 891 + 198 = 1,089)
- As shown above, the answer is 1,089 every time you use the procedures as indicated.
A quantity with both direction and magnitude; such as, force or velocity, is called a vector.
Any point measured from the outside of the sphere to the center of the sphere is equal in distance.
The calendar Jill had on her kitchen wal had big black squares around the dates of each month.
Originally, the information was sent over wires, but modern telemetry more commonly uses radio transmission.
Basically, the process is the same in either case. Among the major applications are monitoring electric-power plants, gathering meteorological data, and monitoring manned and unmanned space flights.
Aerospace telemetry for rockets and satellites was inaugurated with the Soviet satellite Sputnik, launched in 1957, and systems have grown in size and complexity since then.
Observatory satellites have performed as many as 50 different experiments and observations, with all data telemetered back to a ground station.
The techniques developed in aerospace have been successfully applied to many industrial operations, including the transmission of data from inside internal-combustion engines during tests, from steam turbines in operation, and from conveyor belts inside mass-production ovens.
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