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Lerok [7]
3 years ago
7

I need help with this question

Mathematics
1 answer:
klasskru [66]3 years ago
4 0
Its one of the four ;)
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Please help!!
Zolol [24]

Answer:

Exterior = 22.5 degrees

Interior = 157.5 degrees

Step-by-step explanation:

Exterior angles = 360/16 = 22.5

Interior Angles = 180 - 22.5 = 157.5

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Answer the question.
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1 5/8 board will be left!
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Find -1 2/3 + 5/6 on the number line
chubhunter [2.5K]
The answer would be be between 1 and 0.7
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While waiting for a video game to download, you notice that 30% of 32,000 kilobytes have been downloaded so far.
kirill [66]
9600 kilobytes...
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hope this helps!
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Consider functions of the form f(x)=a^x for various values of a. In particular, choose a sequence of values of a that converges
sleet_krkn [62]

Answer:

A. As "a"⇒e, the function f(x)=aˣ tends to be its derivative.

Step-by-step explanation:

A. To show the stretched relation between the fact that "a"⇒e and the derivatives of the function, let´s differentiate f(x) without a value for "a" (leaving it as a constant):

f(x)=a^{x}\\ f'(x)=a^xln(a)

The process will help us to understand what is happening, at first we rewrite the function:

f(x)=a^x\\ f(x)=e^{ln(a^x)}\\ f(x)=e^{xln(a)}\\

And then, we use the chain rule to differentiate:

f'(x)=e^{xln(a)}ln(a)\\ f'(x)=a^xln(a)

Notice the only difference between f(x) and its derivative is the new factor ln(a). But we know  that ln(e)=1, this tell us that as "a"⇒e, ln(a)⇒1 (because ln(x) is a continuous function in (0,∞) ) and as a consequence f'(x)⇒f(x).

In the graph that is attached it´s shown that the functions follows this inequality (the segmented lines are the derivatives):

if a<e<b, then aˣln(a) < aˣ < eˣ < bˣ < bˣln(b)  (and below we explain why this happen)

Considering that ln(a) is a growing function and ln(e)=1, we have:

if a<e<b, then ln(a)< 1 <ln(b)

if a<e, then aˣln(a)<aˣ

if e<b, then bˣ<bˣln(b)

And because eˣ is defined to be the same as its derivative, the cases above results in the following

if a<e<b, then aˣ < eˣ < bˣ (because this function is also a growing function as "a" and "b" gets closer to e)

if a<e, then aˣln(a)<aˣ<eˣ ( f'(x)<f(x) )

if e<b, then eˣ<bˣ<bˣln(b) ( f(x)<f'(x) )

but as "a"⇒e, the difference between f(x) and f'(x) begin to decrease until it gets zero (when a=e)

3 0
4 years ago
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