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ehidna [41]
3 years ago
8

3

Mathematics
1 answer:
horrorfan [7]3 years ago
3 0
More context pls idk
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Don’t mind the writing. Just trying to see if this is right?
LuckyWell [14K]

Answer:


Step-by-step explanation:

Yep you are 100% correct grate job!!

4 0
3 years ago
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What is 32/48 in SIMPLEST form? PLEASE EXPLAIN THOROUGLY!
kari74 [83]
Hi There!

<span>What is 32/48 in SIMPLEST form?

</span>32÷16=2
48÷16=3

<span>So the answer is </span><span>2/3</span>
7 0
3 years ago
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Peter paid 12.83 for a DVD. The price of the DVD was 11.99. How much sales tax did Peter pay?
Natalija [7]
He paid 83 cents for the tax sale
6 0
4 years ago
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A theater group made appearances into cities the hotel charge before tax and the second city was 1500 higher than the first the
Svetlanka [38]

Answer:

The hotel charge in each city before tax was <u>$5125</u> of the first city and <u>$3625</u> of the second city.

Step-by-step explanation:

Given:

A theater group made appearances into cities the hotel charge before tax and the second city was 1500 higher than the first.

The tax of the first city was 6% and the tax of the second city was 10%.

Total hotel tax paid for two cities with $670.

Now, to find the hotel charge in each city before tax.

Let the hotel charge in first city before tax be x.

And the hotel charge in second city before tax be y.

<em>So, as the hotel charge of the second city was 1500 higher than the first.</em>

<em>Thus</em>,

y=x-1500   ........(1)

<em>And as given, the tax of the first city was 6% and the tax of the second city was 10%, total hotel tax paid for two cities with $670.</em>

6% of x + 10% of y = $670.

\frac{6x}{100} +\frac{10y}{100} =670

0.06x+0.10y=670

Substituting the value of y from equation (1) we get:

0.06x+0.10(x-1500)=670

0.06x+0.10x-150=670

0.16x-150=670

<em>Adding both sides by 150 we get:</em>

0.16x=820

<em>Dividing both sides by 0.16 we get:</em>

x=5125.

<em>The hotel charge in first city before tax = $5125.</em>

Now, substituting the value of x in equation (1) we get:

y=x-1500

y=5125-1500

y=3625.

<em>The hotel charge in second city before tax = $3625.</em>

Therefore, the hotel charge in each city before tax was $5125 of the first city and $3625 of the second city.

5 0
4 years ago
Explain how to find the relationship between two quantities, x and y, in a table. How can you use the relationship to calculate
Morgarella [4.7K]

Explanation:

In general, for arbitrary (x, y) pairs, the problem is called an "interpolation" problem. There are a variety of methods of creating interpolation polynomials, or using other functions (not polynomials) to fit a function to a set of points. Much has been written on this subject. We suspect this general case is not what you're interested in.

__

For the usual sorts of tables we see in algebra problems, the relationships are usually polynomial of low degree (linear, quadratic, cubic), or exponential. There may be scale factors and/or translation involved relative to some parent function. Often, the values of x are evenly spaced, which makes the problem simpler.

<u>Polynomial relations</u>

If the x-values are evenly-spaced. then you can determine the nature of the relationship (of those listed in the previous paragraph) by looking at the differences of y-values.

"First differences" are the differences of y-values corresponding to adjacent sequential x-values. For x = 1, 2, 3, 4 and corresponding y = 3, 6, 11, 18 the "first differences" would be 6-3=3, 11-6=5, and 18-11=7. These first differences are not constant. If they were, they would indicate the relation is linear and could be described by a polynomial of first degree.

"Second differences" are the differences of the first differences. In our example, they are 5-3=2 and 7-5=2. These second differences are constant, indicating the relation can be described by a second-degree polynomial, a quadratic.

In general, if the the N-th differences are constant, the relation can be described by a polynomial of N-th degree.

You can always find the polynomial by using the given values to find its coefficients. In our example, we know the polynomial is a quadratic, so we can write it as ...

  y = ax^2 +bx +c

and we can fill in values of x and y to get three equations in a, b, c:

  3 = a(1^2) +b(1) +c

  6 = a(2^2) +b(2) +c

  11 = a(3^2) +b(3) +c

These can be solved by any of the usual methods to find (a, b, c) = (1, 0, 2), so the relation is ...

   y = x^2 +2

__

<u>Exponential relations</u>

If the first differences have a common ratio, that is an indication the relation is exponential. Again, you can write a general form equation for the relation, then fill in x- and y-values to find the specific coefficients. A form that may work for this is ...

  y = a·b^x +c

"c" will represent the horizontal asymptote of the function. Then the initial value (for x=0) will be a+c. If the y-values have a common ratio, then c=0.

__

<u>Finding missing table values</u>

Once you have found the relation, you use it to find missing table values (or any other values of interest). You do this by filling in the information that you know, then solve for the values you don't know.

Using the above example, if we want to find the y-value that corresponds to x=6, we can put 6 where x is:

  y = x^2 +2

  y = 6^2 +2 = 36 +2 = 38 . . . . (6, 38) is the (x, y) pair

If we want to find the x-value that corresponds to y=27, we can put 27 where y is:

  27 = x^2 +2

  25 = x^2 . . . . subtract 2

  5 = x . . . . . . . take the square root*

_____

* In this example, x = -5 also corresponds to y = 27. In this example, our table uses positive values for x. In other cases, the domain of the relation may include negative values of x. You need to evaluate how the table is constructed to see if that suggests one solution or the other. In this example problem, we have the table ...

  (x, y) = (1, 3), (2, 6), (3, 11), (4, 18), (__, 27), (6, __)

so it seems likely that the first blank (x) will be between 4 and 6, and the second blank (y) will be more than 27.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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