Sentences with phrase «cubic centimetres of»

The increased length serves to add a few cubic centimetres of storage to the diminutive trunk, while the increased power and weight negate one another such that the 124's power - to - weight ratio is negligibly better than the MX - 5.
As well as raising IQ by 1.29, it increases the overall volume of the brain — but only by 0.58 per cent of average brain size, adding around 9 cubic centimetres of tissue.
It reached 0.5 picocoulombs per cubic metre in areas where there were 50 particles of ash per cubic centimetre of air (Environmental Research Letters, DOI: 10.1088 / 1748-9326/5 / 2 / 024004).
«There are only 1000 tiny cells in 1 cubic centimetre of sediment, so finding just one is literally like hunting for a needle in a haystack.»
Mars could harbour no more than one billionth of Earth's biomass, or less than one microbial cell per cubic centimetre of soil, Sholes told the Astrobiology Science Conference in Mesa, Arizona, in April.
But a surface can also have a strong effect on a semiconductor, and as porous silicon has an enormous surface area — between 200 and 1000 square metres for each cubic centimetre of the material — many researchers believe a second theory: that the surface is responsible for efficient luminescence.
With respect to mass, the unit was the gram — and the source of constancy was water, thought to be (on Earth) everywhere and always the same: a gram was the mass of one cubic centimetre of water.

Not exact matches

Their densities increased from a single worm to 10,000 worms per cubic centimetre in just 10 days (Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, doi.org/bvwq).
They found that, over the generations, the skulls of men decreased from 3370 cubic centimetres to 3180 cm3.
With a volume of 1200 to 1500 cubic centimetres, our brains are three times the size of those of our nearest relative, the chimpanzee.
But 30 dams on the Guadalquivir, with a total capacity of more than 4 cubic kilometres of water, plus local irrigation schemes, have caused water tables in the wetland to fall by up to 50 centimetres a year.
Palmer says Titan has enough vinyl cyanide to make up to 30 million cell membranes per cubic centimetre in one of its largest seas (Science Advances, doi.org/b95g).
For example, Jupiter's moon Io, whose density is 3.5 grams per cubic centimetre, is all rock, whereas some of Saturn's moons, whose densities are 1.2 grams per cubic centimetre, are nearly pure water ice.
Detailed radio maps of nearby molecular clouds reveal that they are clumpy, with regions containing a wide range of densities — from a few tens of molecules (mostly hydrogen) per cubic centimetre to more than one million.
It has a density of 1.7 grams per cubic centimetre like Pluto's, but less than a third that of Earth.
Near the Sun the average density of interstellar gas is 10 − 21 gm / cm3, which is the equivalent of about one hydrogen atom per cubic centimetre.
Figures for the average brain size of modern humans tend to vary between sources, but a typical value is 1350 or 1400 cc (cubic centimetres).
You are giving yourself a «tune - up» because you are affecting every cubic centimetre inside your body plus the largest organ of your body, your skin, is getting a genuine cleansing due to sweating.
objectives include: Year 6 objectives • solve problems involving the calculation and conversion of units of measure, using decimal notation up to 3 decimal places where appropriate • use, read, write and convert between standard units, converting measurements of length, mass, volume and time from a smaller unit of measure to a larger unit, and vice versa, using decimal notation to up to 3 decimal places • convert between miles and kilometres • recognise that shapes with the same areas can have different perimeters and vice versa • recognise when it is possible to use formulae for area and volume of shapes • calculate the area of parallelograms and triangles • calculate, estimate and compare volume of cubes and cuboids using standard units, including cubic centimetres (cm ³) and cubic metres (m ³), and extending to other units [for example, mm ³ and km ³] • express missing number problems algebraically • find pairs of numbers that satisfy an equation with 2 unknowns • enumerate possibilities of combinations of 2 variables • draw 2 - D shapes using given dimensions and angles • recognise, describe and build simple 3 - D shapes, including making nets • compare and classify geometric shapes based on their properties and sizes and find unknown angles in any triangles, quadrilaterals, and regular polygons • illustrate and name parts of circles, including radius, diameter and circumference and know that the diameter is twice the radius • recognise angles where they meet at a point, are on a straight line, or are vertically opposite, and find missing angles • describe positions on the full coordinate grid (all 4 quadrants) • draw and translate simple shapes on the coordinate plane, and reflect them in the axes • interpret and construct pie charts and line graphs and use these to solve problems • calculate and interpret the mean as an average • read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10,000,000 and determine the value of each digit • round any whole number to a required degree of accuracy and more!
From a displacement of 2996 cubic centimetres, it delivers an output of 367 hp and a torque of up to 520 newton metres.
The bike is powered by a 2 - cylinder, 4 - stroke in - line engine with 853 cubic centimetre displacement, an output of 57 kW / 77 hp and a maximum torque of 83 Nm.
One study, published recently in Nature journal, tried to make an audit of the richness of life in the soil: there could be up to 9,000 different species of bacteria in a cubic centimetre, more than 200 different kinds of fungi in a gram of soil, and the total numbers of these microbes would add up to billions.
The concentration of cloud condensation nuclei in the lower troposphere at a supersaturation of 1 percent ranges from around 100 per cubic centimetre (approximately 1,600 per cubic inch) in size in oceanic air to 500 per cubic centimetre (8,000 per cubic inch) in the atmosphere over a continent.
This region reflects radio waves with frequencies up to about 35 megahertz; the exact value depends on the peak amount of the electron concentration, typically 106 electrons per cubic centimetre, though with large variations caused by the sunspot cycle.
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