Angles: 3 Videos
Video 1: Explores what angles are
Video 2: Provides examples of angles
Video 3: Misconceptions about angles
Video 1: Explores what angles are
Video 2: Provides examples of angles
Video 3: Misconceptions about angles
This video explores the angles found in parallel lines.
You have learnt about static electricity where charged particles (electrons) can move from one object into another giving objects an overall charge. In this unit1 you will learn about current electricity. This is when a continuous flow of charge can be created using a circuit made of conducting wires and an energy source.
The flicker of numbers on a handheld calculator, nerve impulses carrying signals of vision to the brain, an ultrasound device sending a signal to a computer screen, the brain sending a message for a baby to twitch its toes, an electric train pulling into a station, a hydroelectric plant sending energy to metropolitan and rural users—these and many other examples of electricity involve electric current, which is the movement of charge. Humanity has harnessed electricity, the basis of this technology, to improve our quality of life.
Use the dynamic worksheet to practice simplifying expressions with fractional exponents, rewriting them as radicals.
In this course you will learn about:
To lay the foundation for understanding what trigonometry is and how it works, do this next activity.
In this section, you will:
Exercises requiring expressions to be re-written in 'Simple Radical Form'.