Originally, the SAT I was meant to test aptitude and the SAT II was meant to test achievement. That is to say, one tested what you were capable of and the other tested what you knew. But when the College Board moved away from the idea that the SAT I tests innate ability, they framed it as a reasoning test, making the difference between the two less defined.
With the latest changes, the SAT I (now just the SAT) is more focused than ever testing knowledge rather than logic. At this point, I would say that the SAT tests general knowledge and and the Subject Tests assess topical knowledge.
Answer:
Ang panahon o kalagayan ng panahon ay ang paglalarawan sa kalagayan at katangiang pangkalikasan sa labas ng tahanan, gusali o anumang tirahan ng tao, hayop, halaman at iba pang mga nilalang, na ayon sa singaw ng kalawakan o ng atmospera ng daigdig. Tumutukoy ito sa kainitan, katuyuan, kalamigan, kabasaan, katahimikan, pagka-maaraw, pagkamahangin, o pagiging maulan sa isang pook, sa isang takdang oras, na maaaring magbago. Nararamdaman, naririnig, nakikita ng tao ang epekto ng panahon at maging ang pagbabago sa kalagayan nito. Nasusukat din ang panahon sa pamamagitan ng mga termometro, barometro, barograpo, sikrometro o higrometro, panukat ng hangin, anemometro, at mga panukat ng ulan. Depende rin ang taya ng panahon sa pagdating ng kapanahunan ng tag-init, taglamig, taglagas, tagsibol at tag-ulan.[1]
10 images per day. Since it can receive 3 mb per second for 11 hours a day, that’s up to 118,800 megabits it can receive in one day. By multiplying the amount of gigabits in a typical picture (11.2) by the amount of megabits in a gigabit (1024) you get that there’s 11,468.8 megabits in each picture. Lastly, divide the number of megs that the station receives in one day by the amount of megs in a picture, and you get 10 and some change, therefore it can receive up to ten FULL pictures in a day