Answer:
the last year the eschool has 2248 books
Step-by-step explanation:
2284-36=2248
Answer:
:))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Answer:
96. (b)-0.066
97. (d)-0.096
98. (a)179
99. (a)-78
Step-by-step explanation:
Please see attachment
She drove 2 hours at 35 miles per hour for a total of 35 * 2 = 70 miles.
She drove 3 hours at 48 miles per hour for a total of 48 * 3 = 144 miles.
Her total miles were: 70 + 144 = 214.
Her total driving time was 3 + 2 = 5 hours.
Divide her total miles by total time for her average speed:
214 / 5 = 42.8 miles per hour average speed.
Not sure if you need to round the answer or not.
9514 1404 393
Answer:
(a) vertical compression by a factor of 1/3
Step-by-step explanation:
We can see that g(x) = 1/3f(x). Multiplying a function by a constant scales the graph vertically by that factor. When the magnitude of the factor is more than 1, we say the graph is "stretched." When it is less than 1, we say the graph is "compressed" by that factor.
Here, the scale factor is 1/3, so the graph is "vertically compressed by a factor of 1/3."
_____
<em>Additional comment</em>
My <em>personal</em> preference is for compression to be described by the factor the graph is divided by. I would call g(x) a compression of f(x) by a factor of 3. Modern curriculum authors disagree, calling it compression by a factor of 1/3.
Be careful. Using the currently accepted language, a <em>stretch</em> is always by a number <em>larger than 1</em>, and a <em>compression</em> is always by a number <em>less than 1</em>. This rules out choices C and D simply on the basis of the language used.
__
For many graphs, vertical scaling and horizontal scaling can be interchanged. We note that g(x) is wider than f(x), so could be stretched horizontally by some factor. That factor would be √3. The equation using a horizontal stretch factor would be g(x) = (x/√3)^2. Replacing x by x/k is a stretch by a factor of k in the horizontal direction.