Answer:
You didn't add the choices but I'll add some ideas anyway.
Explanation:
Let's start with perhaps the most obvious impact of science on the economy: technology. Scientific discoveries lead to the development of new technologies, which then enter into international markets as highly desirable products.
While humans have always traded technologies, the relationship between technological development and economic growth really dates back to the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries. This was the first time that products were being produced on a massive scale, and it was new technologies in steam engines that allowed this to happen.
As people produced more goods, they developed more complex networks of economic exchange across the world. In fact, our modern ideas about free-market economies and capitalism actually date back to this same time period.
Our modern technologies and our modern economies developed simultaneously. We couldn't have one without the other. Today the United States' economy is very largely dependent on the exportation of communications and digital technologies. Its place in the global economy is not defined by its agriculture or raw products, but by its technologies.
Answer:
circle
Explanation:
line = line graph, line chart
chart = radar chart, area chart and more
bar = bar graph
circle = ❌
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Answer:

Explanation:
The velocity of the swimmer just before touching the water is:


The average force exerted on the diver by the water is determined by the use of the Principle of Energy Conservation and the Work-Energy Theorem:


Answer:
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You can tell because the line bends and the closer it is to horizontal or past horizontal it is more dense