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ozzi
4 years ago
7

What is the least common denominator of ​ 59 ​ and 112 ?

Mathematics
1 answer:
ohaa [14]4 years ago
5 0
<h3>♫ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~Hello There!~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ♫</h3>

➷  Least common denominator would be the smallest value that both numbers can divide into

In this case, it would be 6608

<h3><u>✽</u></h3>

➶ Hope This Helps You!

➶ Good Luck (:

➶ Have A Great Day ^-^

↬ ʜᴀɴɴᴀʜ ♡

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Elanso [62]
I take it you meant θ angle, anyway.

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6 0
3 years ago
Which of the following statements contain a variable? Check all that apply.
andriy [413]

Answer:

the answer is D

Step-by-step explanation:

this is because the number is unknown so  you have to put a variable

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The universally accepted film size for movies has a width of 35 millimeters. If you want to project a movie onto a square sheet
dlinn [17]

Answer:

<h2>The scale factor is 285.7143 ≅ 286.</h2>

Step-by-step explanation:

The square sheet has an area of 100 square meters.

Hence, the width of the sheet is \sqrt{100} = 10 meters.

The scale factor is needs to be in such a way, so that the film's wide will be match perfectly with the square sheet. Hence, 35x millimeters = 10 meters = 10000 millimeters .

x = \frac{10000}{35} = 285.7143.

6 0
3 years ago
Two of the 240 passengers are chosen at random. Find the probability that
hjlf

Step-by-step explanation:

there are in total 240 passengers.

out of these 240, there are 150+30=180 passengers that are in holiday.

and 240-180 = 60 passengers are not.

if we pick one passenger then the probability is 180/240 = 3/4 = 0.75 that he/she is on holiday.

remember : desired "events" over total "events".

i)

now we pick 2 passengers.

the probabilty for the first one to be on holiday is again

3/4 or 0.75.

if that event happens, then we have only 179 passengers out of now 239 to be on holiday.

and to pick one out of that pool to be on holiday is then

179/239 = 0.748953975...

and for both events to happen in one scenario we need to multiply both probabilities (it is an "and" relation, while an addition would be for an "exclusive or" relation).

the probabilty that we pick 2 passengers on holiday is

3/4 × 179/239 = 0.561715481... ≈ 0.5617

we cannot simply square the basic probability of 0.75 (0.75² = 0.5625), because that would mean we pick one passenger, then put him back into the crowd, and then pick a second time (with a chance to pick the same person again). like with rolling a die.

but that is not the scenario as I understand it. it is to pick a passenger, then keep that person singled out and pick a second passenger. hence the difference.

ii)

exactly one of the two is in holiday.

that means

either the first one is on holiday and the second one is not, or the the second one is and the first one is not.

now we model this logic statement in probabilty arithmetic.

please note that after the first pull we need to update the numbers for the remaining pool depending on the result of the first pull.

the total remaining is in both cases 239. but either the remaining people on holiday go down to 179 (and not in holiday stays 60), or the remaining people not on holiday go down to 59 (and on holiday stays 180).

so, the first one is on holiday, and the second one is not :

3/4 × 60/239 (remember : "and" relation)

= 3 × 15/239 = 45/239 = 0.188284519...

the first one is not on holiday, and the second one is :

60/240 × 180/239 = 1/4 × 180/239 = 45/239 =

= 0.188284519...

since there is no overlap of the potential events (there is no event that could be in both cases), this is an exclusive or relation, and we can add the probabilities.

so, the probability for exactly one of the picked passengers to be on holiday is

2×0.188284519... = 0.376569038... ≈ 0.3766

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3 years ago
Please help me Mom made 1.5 L of chicken noodle soup. She has a
Pepsi [2]

Answer: It will not fit

Step-by-step explanation:

1L=33.8 ounces, so half of that (the .5) is 16.9

16.9+33.8= 50.7, which is .7 more that the capacity of the jar. Hope this helps (=

5 0
3 years ago
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