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kogti [31]
4 years ago
12

22 is 11% of what number

Mathematics
2 answers:
aev [14]4 years ago
4 0
2.42 
hope this helps :)

Sav [38]4 years ago
3 0

Let the number be x.

We have to find 11% of that number.

11% of x = (x) (\frac{11}{100} ) = \frac{11x}{100}

Now given 11% of x is 22. So we can write the equation as,

11% of x = 22

\frac{11x}{100} = 22

Now to find x, we will have to move 100 to the right side. 100 is divided there. To move it we have to use reverse operation. Reverse operation of division is multiplication. So we will multiply 100 to both sides. We will get,

(\frac{11x}{100} )(100) = (22)(100)

11x = (22)(100)

11x = 2200

To find x, we will have to move 11 to the right side. 11 is multiplied there. So we will use division. We will get,

\frac{(11x)}{11} = \frac{2200}{11}

x = \frac{2200}{11}

x = 200

We have got the required answer. The number is 200.

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yawa3891 [41]

Answer:

B) 4.07

Step-by-step explanation:

First we need to calculate the mean of all the data, which is the same as the mean of the means of each grade of gasoline:

Regular    BelowRegular   Premium   SuperPremium

39.31             36.69                38.99             40.04

39.87            40.00                40.02             39.89

39.87            41.01                  39.99             39.93

X1⁻=39.68    X2⁻= 39.23       X3⁻= 39.66    X4⁻=  39.95

Xgrand⁻ = (39.68+39.23+39.66+39.95)/4 = 39.63

Next we need to calculate the sum of squares within the group (SSW) and the sum of squares between the groups (SSB), and the respective degrees of freedom):

SSW = [ (39.31-39.68)² + (39.87-39.68)² + (39.87-39.68)² ] + [ (36.69-39.23)² + (40.00-39.23)² + (41.01-39.23)² ] + [ (38.99-39.66)² + (40.02-39.66)² + (39.99-39.66)² ] + [ (40.04-39.95)² + (39.89-39.95)² + (39.93-39.95)² ] = [0.2091] + [10.2129] + [0.6874] + [0.0121] = 11.12

SSW =  11.12

Degrees of freedom in this case is calculated by m(n-1), with m being the number of grades of gasoline (4) and n being the number of trial results for each one (3), so we would have 4(3-1) = 8 degrees of freedom

SSB = [ (39.68-39.63)² + (39.68-39.63)² + (39.68-39.63)²] + [ (39.23-39.63)² + (39.23-39.63)² + (39.23-39.63)² ] + [ (39.66-39.63)² + (39.66-39.63)² + (39.66-39.63)² ] + [ (39.95-39.63)² + (39.95-39.63)² +(39.95-39.63)² ] = [0.0075] + [0.48] + [0.0027] + [0.3072] = 0.7974

SSB =  0.80

For this case, the degrees of freedom are m-1, so we would have 4-1 = 3 degrees of freedom

Now we can establish the hypothesis for the test:

H0: μ1 = μ2 = μ3 = μ4

The null hypothesis states that the means of miles per gallon for each fuel are the same, indicating that the drade of gasoline does not make a difference, therefore our alternative hypothesis will be:

H1: the grade of gasoline does makes a difference

We will use the F statistic to test the hypothesis, which is calculated like follows:

F - statistic = (SSB/m-1) / (SSW/m(n-1)) = (0.80/3) / (11.12/8) = 0.19

We know that the level of significance we are using is α = 0.05, so to find the critical value F we need to look at some table of critical values for the F distribution for the 0.05 significance level (like the attached image). Then we just need to look fot the value that is located in the intersection between the degrees of freedom we have in the numerator (horizontal) and the denominator (vertical) of the statistic (3 and 8). That critical value is:

Fc = 4.07

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vitfil [10]

Answer:

1. -7.5

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Step-by-step explanation:

For number 1, it can be solved by using the PEMDAS method, or see explanation below:

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x = -15/2 or -7.5

For number 2, substitute 3 into both equations:

f(x) =1.50(3) + 2.00

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This would get $6.50 and $7.50, which, if subtracted, gets $1.

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7 0
3 years ago
The person who answes my question can u stay because i have more thankyou
castortr0y [4]

Answer:

c. 60 mins

Step-by-step explanation:

12 * 5 = 60

15 * 4 = 60

5 0
3 years ago
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