Actually no. Not at all. TRUST ME!!!!!
With a dihybrid cross, there are 9 possible genotypes and 4 possible phenotypes. The ratio of phenotypes expected is 9 LR : 3 Lr : 3 lR : 1 lr. The probability of a homozygous dominant for both traits is 1/16 or 6%. The probability of having a dominant phenotype for both traits is 9/16 or 56%. 9/16 is roughly equal to 3/5 - so this is the expected ratio.
9
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There are 16 oz in a cup, so nine parts of that is 9 oz/16 oz, or 9/16 cup.
9:1/2 or 0.5
HD television formats always use an aspect ratio of 16 : 9. For that reason, all HD televisions have that aspect ratio. A 12 : 9 (or 4 : 3) aspect ratio is only used with standard definition video signals so any 4 : 3 television will be a standard definition model only.
Most newer TVs are in widescreen format, which is 16:9.
HD screens have an aspect ratio of 16 : 9. Standard definition televisions can be either 16 : 9 or 4 : 3. The widescreen ratio for SD televisions was introduced in Europe around 1990 but was not used in North America.
Unless i am misunderstanding your question, you shouldn't need to convert that since 1.78 x 1 is equivalent to 16 x 9 1.78/1 = 16/9
No, because nobody wants a 3:4 (Academy) ratio TV when all stations are now broadcasting in wide-screen 16:9 ratio.
The aspect ration for this television is 16:9
Strictly speaking, a TV receiver is the device that decodes a transmitted signal but it's safe to assume that the question refers to a television or monitor. Conventional televisions have an aspect ratio of 4 : 3, that is the width is 4 units wide compared to the height which is 3 units wide. Widescreen televisions have an aspect ratio of 16 : 9. 16 : 9 is the only aspect ratio for HD television. In North America, SD television is 4 : 3 only. In Europe however, 16 : 9 became the norm for standard definition television some years ago. Television broadcasts have now moved exclusively to a widescreen format even if they are in SD.
The ratio is 16:9.
It depends what type of screen you're watching it on ! A 'standard' TV set uses 4:3 ratio. A wide-screen model uses 16:9 ratio.
Any current HDTV will have an aspect ratio of 16:9. Only older CRT or rear-projection TV's will have the old 4:3 format.
The TV format setting is so that it sends the correct picture information when connected to a TV. It may be connected to a 4:3 aspect ratio TV or a 16:9 aspect ratio TV. For example if it was sending a 16:9 picture to a 4:3 TV, some of the picture to the left ad right sides would be missing. If sending 4:3 picture to a 16:9 TV the picture would be stretched across the screen distorting the picture.
I just experienced this for the first time and I switched from 16:9 ratio to Panoramic and that seems to have done the trick. Still going to research why I cannot watch in 16:9 though.