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sergij07 [2.7K]
4 years ago
13

What kind of food do math teachers eat

Mathematics
2 answers:
Vitek1552 [10]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Food.

Step-by-step explanation:

They could eat anything, really.

Naddik [55]4 years ago
3 0

Answer:

apples

Step-by-step explanation:

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The temperature on Monday was -3 degrees Fahrenheit. By Wednesday the temperature was 16 degrees Fahrenheit. What is the differe
Alexeev081 [22]
The temperature went from -3 to 16. The difference between the two numbers (16- -3) = 19 degrees Fahrenheit.

I hope this helps!
4 0
3 years ago
Pls helpppppp I really need it
Aloiza [94]

Answer:

1. 1:4 - 1/4  -  25%

2.  3:5  - 3/5 - 0.6 (simplified version)

    6:10 - 6/10 (unsimplified)

Step-by-step explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
3. Let A, B, C be sets and let ????: ???? → ???? and ????: ???? → ????be two functions. Prove or find a counterexample to each o
Fiesta28 [93]

Answer / Explanation

The question is incomplete. It can be found in search engines. However, kindly find the complete question below.

Question

(1) Give an example of functions f : A −→ B and g : B −→ C such that g ◦ f is injective but g is not  injective.

(2) Suppose that f : A −→ B and g : B −→ C are functions and that g ◦ f is surjective. Is it true  that f must be surjective? Is it true that g must be surjective? Justify your answers with either a  counterexample or a proof

Answer

(1) There are lots of correct answers. You can set A = {1}, B = {2, 3} and C = {4}. Then define f : A −→ B by f(1) = 2 and g : B −→ C by g(2) = 4 and g(3) = 4. Then g is not  injective (since both 2, 3 7→ 4) but g ◦ f is injective.  Here’s another correct answer using more familiar functions.

Let f : R≥0 −→ R be given by f(x) = √

x. Let g : R −→ R be given by g(x) = x , 2  . Then g is not  injective (since g(1) = g(−1)) but g ◦ f : R≥0 −→ R is injective since it sends x 7→ x.

NOTE: Lots of groups did some variant of the second example. I took off points if they didn’t  specify the domain and codomain though. Note that the codomain of f must equal the domain of

g for g ◦ f to make sense.

(2) Answer

Solution: There are two questions in this problem.

Must f be surjective? The answer is no. Indeed, let A = {1}, B = {2, 3} and C = {4}.  Then define f : A −→ B by f(1) = 2 and g : B −→ C by g(2) = 4 and g(3) = 4. We see that  g ◦ f : {1} −→ {4} is surjective (since 1 7→ 4) but f is certainly not surjective.  Must g be surjective? The answer is yes, here’s the proof. Suppose that c ∈ C is arbitrary (we  must find b ∈ B so that g(b) = c, at which point we will be done). Since g ◦ f is surjective, for the  c we have already fixed, there exists some a ∈ A such that c = (g ◦ f)(a) = g(f(a)). Let b := f(a).

Then g(b) = g(f(a)) = c and we have found our desired b.  Remark: It is good to compare the answer to this problem to the answer to the two problems

on the previous page.  The part of this problem most groups had the most issue with was the second. Everyone should  be comfortable with carefully proving a function is surjective by the time we get to the midterm.

3 0
4 years ago
-27 w3 + 125 factorize<br>​
Sedbober [7]

-1(3w-5)(9w^{2} +15w+25)

4 0
2 years ago
A squirrel can run at a maximum speed of 4 miles per hour.
Vsevolod [243]

Answer:  

36 miles per hour if you were trying to multiply it.

Step-by-step explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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