First LawThe quantity of a substance produced by electrolysis is proprotional to the quantity of electricity used.Second LawFor a given quantity of electricity the quantity of substance produced is proportional to its weight.
"change in location" "displacement"
derived quantity
Velocity is a vector.Its magnitude is called 'speed'.
A vector quantity has both size (magnitude) and direction involved but a scalar quantity only has size involved and not direction.
change of any quantity divided by its original quantity
a change in quantity supplied is the result of
Constant is a quantity that does not change.
Feedback in general is the process in which changing one quantity changes a second quantity, and the change in the second quantity in turn changes the first.Positive feedback amplifies the change in the first quantity while negative feedback reduces it.....
It is Price Elasticity of Supply. It is defined as the ratio of a percentage change in quantity supplied to the percentage change in price (which brought about the change in quantity supplied).
It is Price Elasticity of Supply. It is defined as the ratio of a percentage change in quantity supplied to the percentage change in price (which brought about the change in quantity supplied).
It is Price Elasticity of Supply. It is defined as the ratio of a percentage change in quantity supplied to the percentage change in price (which brought about the change in quantity supplied).
No, the magnitude of a quantity does not change with a change in the system of units. The numerical value representing the quantity may change based on the system of units used, but the magnitude itself remains constant.
measure of the average responsiveness of quantity to price over an interval of the demand curve. = change in quantity/ Quantity ___________________________ change in price/ Price
Change.
It will be very sensitive to price change. A change in the price will change the quantity supplied by a factor greater than 1. ps: Price elasticity of supply= (% change in quantity supplied)/(% change in price)
A change in supply means that the supply curve has shifted. With a stable demand, this will result in a change in the quantity supplied but also a change in price. A change in only quantity supplied without a change in supply would require a horizontal supply curve. Alternatively a change in quantity supplied and price may occur if there is a shift of the demand curve.