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ahrayia [7]
4 years ago
14

Plz help with both plz

Mathematics
2 answers:
melamori03 [73]4 years ago
7 0
<span>Step 1: 0.04 = 4⁄100</span> 
<span>Step 2: Simplify 4⁄100 = 1⁄25</span> 

<span>
</span>
lawyer [7]4 years ago
5 0
B.<span> 0.04 = 4⁄100</span> <span>Simplify 4⁄100 = 1⁄<span>25
d. 0.19  19/100</span></span>
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The function g(x) = 2x2 – 28x + 3 written in vertex form is g(x) = 2(x – 7)2 – 95. Which is one of the transformations applied t
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<span>3)shifted right 7 units</span>
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Quadratic Functions: Factored Form
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Answer:

a. (x - 12)(x+1)

b. (x + 2)(x-6)

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NO LINKS!!!<br><br>Please help me with parts b and c. ​
bekas [8.4K]

9514 1404 393

Answer:

  b.  A × B = GCF(A, B) × LCM(A, B)

  c. 15 = GCF × LCM / 20

Step-by-step explanation:

b. The products of the numbers in the table are 80, 108, 216, 45.

The products of the corresponding GCF and LCM are 80, 108, 216, 45.

Conjecture: the product of the numbers is equal to the product of the GCF and LCM.

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c. GCF×LCM = 5×60 = 300 = A×B = 20×B

  B = 300/20 = 15

The other number is 15, found by using the conjecture of part b.

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<h3><em>Additional comment</em></h3>

If you think for a minute about what the GCF and LCM are, you realize the relationship discussed in this problem must be the case. Consider the factors of two numbers A and B:

  A = (factors in common with B) × (factors unique to A)

  B = (factors in common with A) × (factors unique to B)

The GCF, by definition, are (factors in common between A and B).

The LCM, by definition, is the product of unique factors:

  (common factors) × (factors unique to A) × (factors unique to B)

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Then the product of the LCM and the GCF is ...

  GCF × LCM =

  (factors in common) × ((factors in common) × (unique to A) × (unique to B))

Using the associative and commutative properties of multiplication, we can rearrange this product to be ...

  ((factors in common)×(unique to A)) × ((factors in common)×(unique to B))

  = A × B

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Personally, I use a kind of diagram to represent the factorization of A and B and their LCM and GCF:

  [unique to A (common] unique to B)

Then A = factors in [ ], and B = factors in ( ). The stuff in (common] is the GCF, and the overall product is the LCM.

Using the example of part c, this would look like [4 (5] 3), so A = 4·5 = 20 and B = 5·3 = 15. The GCF is 5, and the LCM is 4·5·3 = 60.

The end parts <em>[unique to A(</em> and <em>]unique to B)</em> can have no common factors. Any common factors must reside in the (common] part.

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ivolga24 [154]
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Set up the integral needed to find the volume of the solid bounded by the hyperboloid z2 = 64 x2 y2 and by the upper nappe of th
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The intersection of the two surfaces occurs as a circle:

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The volume of this space is given by the integral

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where S denotes the bounded space between the surfaces. Converting to cylindrical coordinates, this can be expressed as

\displaystyle\int_{\theta=0}^{\theta=2\pi}\int_{r=0}^{r=8}\int_{z=\sqrt2r}^{z=\sqrt{64+r^2}}r\,\mathrm dz\,\mathrm dr\,\mathrm d\theta

which evaluates to \dfrac{1024\pi(\sqrt2-1)}3.
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