<u>Answer:</u>
The height of the tower nearby the pole is 102 m.
<u>Solution:</u>
Given,
Height of the pole = 3.5 m
Length of the shadow of the pole = 1.47 m
Length of the shadow of the tower nearby = 42.75 m
Let us assume the height of the tower as x


On solving for x we get,


On rounding off to the nearest meter we get,
x=102 m
The height of the tower is 102 meter.
Answer:
12
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
300 programs
Step-by-step explanation:
Let’s work with cents to make this easier. We convert the $12 to cents, making 1200 cents
Let the number of copies Alden printed be x. His total printing cost would be x * 54 = 54x cents.
He sold at 75 cents each and still had left 100 copies. This means his total sale would be (x - 100)75
He lost $12 on the venture. This means his cost price minus his selling price is $12 since it’s a loss.
Computing this:
54x - 75(x - 100) = 1200
54x - 75x + 7500 = 1200
-21x = 1200 - 7500
-21x = -6,300
x = 6300/21 = 300 programs
Answer:
125.66
Step-by-step explanation:
C = 2πr = 2·π·20 = 125.66371
Answer:
The top tree correctly represents the sample space
Step-by-step explanation:
At the "root" of our tree, we can either have three branches for each of the flavors, or two branches for each of the types of crust. Here's how each of those branches continue:
- If we start with the <em>three branches for flavors</em>, each branch will have <em>two more branches for the types of crust</em>. Working down the tree, I could start by choosing the pepperoni branch, and then continue to choose either thin or hand-tossed crust.
- If we start with the <em>two branches for crusts</em>, each branch will have <em>three more branches for the flavors</em>. This option is represented as the first tree in the image, and in this case would be the correct choice.