Not sure if you mean to ask for the first order partial derivatives, one wrt x and the other wrt y, or the second order partial derivative, first wrt x then wrt y. I'll assume the former.


Or, if you actually did want the second order derivative,
![\dfrac{\partial^2}{\partial y\partial x}(2x+3y)^{10}=\dfrac\partial{\partial y}\left[20(2x+3y)^9\right]=180(2x+3y)^8\times3=540(2x+3y)^8](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=%5Cdfrac%7B%5Cpartial%5E2%7D%7B%5Cpartial%20y%5Cpartial%20x%7D%282x%2B3y%29%5E%7B10%7D%3D%5Cdfrac%5Cpartial%7B%5Cpartial%20y%7D%5Cleft%5B20%282x%2B3y%29%5E9%5Cright%5D%3D180%282x%2B3y%29%5E8%5Ctimes3%3D540%282x%2B3y%29%5E8)
and in case you meant the other way around, no need to compute that, as

by Schwarz' theorem (the partial derivatives are guaranteed to be continuous because

is a polynomial).
Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:
Since we see that 3/7 is multiplied by itself three times, we can use exponents as a shorter way to write this. The expontent tells us how many times the base number, 3/7, is multiplied by itself.
= 
We then multiply by -1 to (3/7)^3 to get the exact answer.

Answer:
The two data sets have different distributions and different ranges.
Step-by-step explanation:
When you subtract for both of the ranges they are different numbers. So that's the second part. The numbers along the bottom are different too so that is the different distributions.
38.9 is the answer. because it is rounded to the nearest tenth.