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Oct 9 at 2:01 answer added jginestet timeline score: 0
Oct 8 at 22:36 history edited Victor Tchervenobrejki CC BY-SA 4.0
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Oct 8 at 22:34 comment added Victor Tchervenobrejki You are right - my bad. If the sensitivity is 100 micrograms, than a measure of 500 micrograms would imply an actual weight anywhere between 450 micrograms and 550 micrograms. This is what I meant. I will edit this in my question. A single larvae is around 20 micrograms.
Oct 8 at 19:50 comment added jginestet SOmething does not make sense in the question wrt scale sensitivity. YOu write The scale rounds the total weights due to its sensitivity (100 micrograms). For example, if the total weight is recorded as 50 micrograms, the actual weight could range between 49.5 and 50.5 micrograms., but if the sensitivity is 100 ug, you can not measure 50ug? ANd if you are talking milligrams (mg), then measurements are between, say, .5 mg and .6 mg (or 500 and 600 ug). Can you clarify? Also, what order of magnitude is the weight of a single larva?
Oct 8 at 15:38 history edited Victor Tchervenobrejki CC BY-SA 4.0
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Oct 8 at 15:34 history edited Victor Tchervenobrejki CC BY-SA 4.0
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S Oct 8 at 15:25 review First questions
Oct 8 at 18:56
S Oct 8 at 15:25 history asked Victor Tchervenobrejki CC BY-SA 4.0