The answer is D. Think back to the quadratic formula
You would plug in values of a, b, and c to find the zeros of the equations. It would the same way in a spreadsheet program where the cells contain the a, b, and c values but you can have more values and a different equation.
Answer:
hypotenuse = 5
height = 2
Using Pythagoras theorem,
5² = 2² + m²
=> 25 = 4 + m²
=> 25–4 = m²
=> √21 = m
=> m = 4.58
Value of m is 4.58
Answer: Yes ,because it isn't the same the number since the number of digits aren't the same so you make it the same number of digits by putting 0 in the back so 1.7 turns to 1.700 to make it the same digits of 1.700.
Step-by-step explanation:
Let's start b writing down coordinates of all points:
A(0,0,0)
B(0,5,0)
C(3,5,0)
D(3,0,0)
E(3,0,4)
F(0,0,4)
G(0,5,4)
H(3,5,4)
a.) When we reflect over xz plane x and z coordinates stay same, y coordinate changes to same numerical value but opposite sign. Moving front-back is moving over x-axis, moving left-right is moving over y-axis, moving up-down is moving over z-axis.
A(0,0,0)
Reflecting
A(0,0,0)
B(0,5,0)
Reflecting
B(0,-5,0)
C(3,5,0)
Reflecting
C(3,-5,0)
D(3,0,0)
Reflecting
D(3,0,0)
b.)
A(0,0,0)
Moving
A(-2,-3,1)
B(0,-5,0)
Moving
B(-2,-8,1)
C(3,-5,0)
Moving
C(1,-8,1)
D(3,0,0)
Moving
D(1,-3,1)