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pav-90 [236]
3 years ago
10

You have baked 48 cookies. You want to keep 12 for your family, the rest you want to split between 9 friends. How many cookies w

ill each friend receive?
Mathematics
2 answers:
yaroslaw [1]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

each friend will recieve 4 cookies

Step-by-step explanation:

if you take away the 12 cookies and give them to your family, you are then left with 36 cookies, once you devide those by the 9 friends you get four, representing the amount of cookies ea ch friend will have

myrzilka [38]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

4 cookies each

Step-by-step explanation:

48 - 12 = 36 cookies for friends

36/9 = 4 cookies for each friend

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Take a factor out of the square root:
Andrews [41]

Answer:

1.  |y| sqrt(10)

2.  |x| sqrt(x)

3. a^2 sqrt(a)

4.  4 |y|^3 sqrt(3)

5.  1/4 *|x| sqrt(3x)

Step-by-step explanation:

1.  sqrt(10y^2)

We know that sqrt(ab) = sqrt(a) sqrt(b)

sqrt(y^2) sqrt(10)

|y| sqrt(10)

We take the absolute  value of y because -y*-y = y^2 and the principle square root is y

2.  sqrt(x^3)

We know that sqrt(ab) = sqrt(a) sqrt(b)

sqrt(x^2) sqrt(x)

|x| sqrt(x)

3. sqrt(a^5)

We know that sqrt(ab) = sqrt(a) sqrt(b)

sqrt(a^4) sqrt(a)

a^2 sqrt(a)

4.  sqrt(16 y^7)

We know that sqrt(ab) = sqrt(a) sqrt(b)

sqrt(16) sqrt(y^6)sqrt(y)

4 |y|^3 sqrt(3)

5.  sqrt(3/16x^3)

We know that sqrt(ab) = sqrt(a) sqrt(b)

sqrt(1/16) sqrt(x^2)sqrt(3x)

1/4 *|x| sqrt(3x)

3 0
3 years ago
Why were most peppered moths dark in the 1959 era but light in the 2000s?
damaskus [11]
The environment changed so the light moths benefited from the ad adaptation that they had that in cause an increase in light moths.

M=4
12/3=4
6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Taylor Series Questions!
riadik2000 [5.3K]
5.
f(x)=\sin x\implies f(\pi)=0
f'(x)=\cos x\implies f'(\pi)=-1
f''(x)=-\sin x\implies f''(\pi)=0
f'''(x)=-\cos x\implies f'''(\pi)=1

Clearly, each even-order derivative will vanish, and the terms that remain will alternate in sign, so the Taylor series is given by

f(x)=-(x-\pi)+\dfrac{(x-\pi)^3}{3!}-\dfrac{(x-\pi)^5}{5!}+\cdots
f(x)=\displaystyle\sum_{n\ge0}\frac{(-1)^{n-1}(x-\pi)^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}

Your answer is off by a sign - the source of this error is the fact that you used the series expansion centered at x=0, not x=\pi, and so the sign on each derivative at x=\pi is opposite of what it should be. I'm sure you can figure out the radius of convergence from here.

- - -

6. Note that this is already a polynomial, so the Taylor series will strongly resemble this and will consist of a finite number of terms. You can get the series by evaluating the derivatives at the given point, or you can simply rewrite the polynomial in x as a polynomial in x-2.

f(x)=x^6-x^4+2\implies f(2)=50
f'(x)=6x^5-4x^3\implies f'(2)=160
f''(x)=30x^4-12x^2\implies f''(2)=432
f'''(x)=120x^3-24x\implies f'''(2)=912
f^{(4)}(x)=360x^2-24\implies f^{(4)}(2)=1416
f^{(5)}(x)=720x\implies f^{(5)}(2)=1440
f^{(6)}(x)=720\implies f^{(6)}(2)=720
f^{(n\ge7)}(x)=0\implies f^{(n\ge7)}(2)=0

\implies f(x)=50+160(x-2)+216(x-2)^2+152(x-2)^3+59(x-2)^4+12(x-2)^5+(x-2)^6

If you expand this, you will end up with f(x) again, so the Taylor series must converge everywhere.

I'll outline the second method. The idea is to find coefficients so that the right hand side below matches the original polynomial:

x^6-x^4+2=(x-2)^6+a_5(x-2)^5+a_4(x-2)^4+a_3(x-2)^3+a_2(x-2)^2+a_1(x-2)+a_0

You would expand the right side, match up the coefficients for the same-power terms on the left, then solve the linear system that comes out of that. You would end up with the same result as with the standard derivative method, though perhaps more work than necessary.

- - -

7. It would help to write the square root as a rational power first:

f(x)=\sqrt x=x^{1/2}\implies f(4)=2
f'(x)=\dfrac{(-1)^0}{2^1}x^{-1/2}\implies f'(4)=\dfrac1{2^2}
f''(x)=\dfrac{(-1)^1}{2^2}x^{-3/2}\implies f''(4)=-\dfrac1{2^5}
f'''(x)=\dfrac{(-1)^2(1\times3)}{2^3}x^{-5/2}\implies f'''(4)=\dfrac3{2^8}
f^{(4)}(x)=\dfrac{(-1)^3(1\times3\times5)}{2^4}x^{-7/2}\implies f^{(4)}(4)=-\dfrac{15}{2^{11}}
f^{(5)}(x)=\dfrac{(-1)^4(1\times3\times5\times7)}{2^5}x^{-9/2}\implies f^{(5)}(4)=\dfrac{105}{2^{14}}

The pattern should be fairly easy to see.

f(x)=2+\dfrac{x-4}{2^2}-\dfrac{(x-4)^2}{2^5\times2!}+\dfrac{3(x-4)^3}{2^8\times3!}-\dfrac{15(x-4)^4}{2^{11}\times4!}+\cdots
f(x)=2+\displaystyle\sum_{n\ge1}\dfrac{(-1)^n(-1\times1\times3\times5\times\cdots\times(2n-3)}{2^{3n-1}n!}(x-4)^n

By the ratio test, the series converges if

\displaystyle\lim_{n\to\infty}\left|\frac{\dfrac{(-1)^{n+1}(-1\times\cdots\times(2n-3)\times(2n-1))(x-4)^{n+1}}{2^{3n+2}(n+1)!}}{\dfrac{(-1)^n(-1\times\cdots\tiems(2n-3))(x-4)^n}{2^{3n-1}n!}}\right|
\implies\displaystyle\frac{|x-4|}8\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{2n-1}{n+1}=\frac{|x-4|}4
\implies |x-4|

so that the ROC is 4.

- - -

10. Without going into much detail, you should have as your Taylor polynomial

\sin x\approx T_4(x)=\dfrac12+\dfrac{\sqrt3}2\left(x-\dfrac\pi6\right)-\dfrac14\left(x-\dfrac\pi6\right)^2-\dfrac1{4\sqrt3}\left(x-\dfrac\pi6\right)^3+\dfrac1{48}\left(x-\dfrac\pi6\right)^4

Taylor's inequality then asserts that the error of approximation on the interval 0\le x\le\dfrac\pi3 is given by

|\sin x-T_4(x)|=|R_4(x)|\le\dfrac{M\left|x-\frac\pi6\right|^5}{5!}

where M satisfies |f^{(5)}(x)|\le M on the interval.

We know that (\sin x)^{(5)}=\cos x is bounded between -1 and 1, so we know M=1 will suffice. Over the given interval, we have \left|x-\dfrac\pi6\right|\le\dfrac\pi6, so the remainder will be bounded above by

|R_4(x)|\le\dfrac{1\times\left(\frac\pi6\right)^5}{5!}=\dfrac{\pi^5}{933120}\approx0.000328

which is to say, over the interval 0\le x\le\dfrac\pi3, the fourth degree Taylor polynomial approximates the value of \sin x near x=\dfrac\pi6 to within 0.000328.
7 0
4 years ago
What is the first step in solving 5x-3=12?
sergij07 [2.7K]

Answer: 5x = 12 + 3

5x = 15 (divide both sides by 5 to get x)

Step-by-step explanation:

5x/5 = 15/5\\x = 3

6 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Given the numbers 9 and 6 as legs of a right triangle, what is the length of the hypotenuse? Round your answer to the nearest
Ivahew [28]

hypotensuse \:  =  \sqrt{  {6}^{2} +  {9}^{2} }  =  \sqrt{36 +81  }  =  \sqrt{117}  = 10.82

6 0
3 years ago
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