Your approach is the ideal approach...
<span>the bone of contention here is the value of T... </span>
<span>it simply depends on the definition given... some people use 360, others use 365... so it depends on which style your class (or book) uses... </span>
Hello from MrBillDoesMath!
Answer:
t = i /(Pr)
Discussion:
i = Prt => (divide both sides by "Pr")
i/(Pr) = (Prt)/(Pr)
= (Pr)t/(Pr)
= t (as (Pr)/(Pr) = 1)
Thank you,
MrB
12 is not a perfect square, but 4, a factor of 12, is a perfect square. Thus, separate the problem
sqrt(12) into factors as follows:
sqrt(12) = sqrt(4)*sqrt(2) = 2*sqrt(2) (answer)