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DENIUS [597]
3 years ago
6

In a bag of M&MS there are 4 green, 6 yellow and 8 blue candies. What is the probability of drawing a blue then a green if y

ou replace the candy after the draw?
Mathematics
1 answer:
LuckyWell [14K]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

8/81

Step-by-step explanation:

8/18 x 4/18 = 32/324 = 8/81

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WHO IS AN EXPERT IN LANGUAGE ARTS IF SO I NEED MAJOR HELP ASAP
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What multiply by 60 give you a 100​
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If 1/4 gallons of water are enough to fill 7/10 of the pool how much water is nessacary to fill in the entire pool
anyanavicka [17]
<h3>Answer:  5/14 gallons</h3>

============================================================

Work Shown:

1/4 = 0.25

7/10 = 0.70 = 70%

We are told that 0.25 gallons of water fills 70% of the pool

We want to find how many gallons of water (call it x) are needed to fill 100% of the pool.

Set up the proportion below and solve for x

(0.25 gallons)/(70% filled) = (x gallons)/(100% filled)

0.25/70 = x/100

0.25*100 = 70x ....... cross multiply

25 = 70x

70x = 25

x = 25/70

x = (5*5)/(5*14)

x = 5/14 gallons

----------------------------------------

An alternate method:

1/4 gallons = 7/10 pools filled

(10/7)*(1/4 gallons) = (10/7)*(7/10 pools filled)

(10*1)/(7*4) gallons = (10*7)/(7*10) pools filled

10/28 gallons = 1 pool filled

(5*2)/(14*2) gallons = 1 pool filled

5/14 gallons = 1 pool filled

In the second step, I multiplied both sides by 10/7 so that the "7/10" turns into "1".

----------------------------------------

Yet another alternate method:

1/4 = 10/40

7/10 = 28/40

We need 10/40 gallons of water to fill 28/40 of one pool. We can multiply both fractions by 40 to indicate that 10 gallons of water will fill up 28 pools.

So we have this ratio

10 gallons : 28 pools

Dividing both parts by 28 tells us how many gallons are needed for one pool

10 gallons : 28 pools

10/28 gallons : 28/28 pools

10/28 gallons : 1 pool

5/14 gallons : 1 pool

8 0
3 years ago
Which questions best describes: A tire manufacturer has a 60,000 mile warranty for tread life. The manufacturer considers the ov
seropon [69]

This question is incomplete because the answer choices were not provided. The complete question was obtained from google as:

A tire manufacturer has a 60,000 mile warranty for tread life. The manufacturer considers the overall tire quality to be acceptable if less than 5% are worn out at 60,000 miles. The manufacturer tests 250 tires that have been used for 60,000 miles. They find that 3.6% of them are worn out. With this data, we test the following hypotheses.

H0: The proportion of tires that are worn out after 60,000 miles is equal to 0.05.

Ha: The proportion of tires that are worn out after 60,000 miles is less than 0.05.

In order to assess the evidence, which question best describes what we need to determine?

a. If we examine a sample of tires used for 60,000 miles and determine the proportion that are worn out, how likely is that proportion to be 3.6% or less?

b. If we examine the proportion of worn out tires in the population of tires used for 60,000 miles, how likely is that proportion to be 5%?

c. If we examine the proportion of worn out tires in the population of tires used for 60,000 miles, how likely is that proportion to be less than 5%?

d. If we examine the proportion of worn out tires in the population of tires used for 60,000 miles, how likely is that proportion to be 3.6%?

e. If we examine a sample of tires used for 60,000 miles and determine the proportion that are worn out, how likely is that proportion to be less than 5%?

Answer:

Option A is the correct question - If we examine a sample of tires used for 60,000 miles and determine the proportion that is worn out, how likely is that proportion to be 3.6% or less?

Step-by-step explanation:

The correct question that describes what needs to be determined is expressed in option A as this will give us p-value and we will guide us in deciding whether to keep or reject the null hypothesis

Thus option A is the correct question - If we examine a sample of tires used for 60,000 miles and determine the proportion that is worn out, how likely is that proportion to be 3.6% or less?

7 0
3 years ago
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