The most famous impossible problem from Greek Antiquity is doubling the cube. The problem is to construct a cube whose volume is double that of a given one. It is often denoted to as the Delian problem due to a myth that the Delians had look up Plato on the subject. In another form, the story proclaims that the Athenians in 430 B.C. consulted the oracle at Delos in the hope to break the plague devastating their country. They were advised by Apollo to double his altar that had the form of a cube. As an effect of several failed attempts to satisfy the god, the plague only got worse and at the end they turned to Plato for advice. (According to Rouse Ball and Coxeter, p 340, an Arab variant asserts that the plague had wrecked between the children of Israel but the name of Apollo had been discreetly gone astray.) According to a message from the mathematician Eratosthenes to King Ptolemy of Egypt, Euripides mentioned the Delian problem in one of his (now lost) tragedies. The other three antiquity are: angle trisection, squaring a circle, and constructing a regular heptagon.
Answer:
the answer is the third one.
Step-by-step explanation:
the number line is closed circle and at least means greater than or equal to so the answer is "C".
Step-by-step explanation:
I cant show a number line so i'll do my best to explain how its graphed.
15) x - 1 < 15
add 1 to both sides:
x < 16
Because it is less than, rather than less than or equal to, it's graphed with an open circle (not filled in) on 16, and everything less than 16 highlighted
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16) 2(y + 1) - 2 ≥ 12
distribute the 2:
2y + 2 - 2 ≥ 12
combine like terms
2y ≥ 12
isolate y:
y ≥ 6
This one is greater than or equal to, so it's graphed with a closed circle (filled in) and everything above 6 highlighted
Average rate of change= [f (x2)-f (x1)]/(x2-x1)
(the same formula of the slope)
x2=5
x1=1
f (x2)=5^3-1 =124
f (x1)= 1^3-1 =0
(124-0)/(5-1) = 31
2x-x+5+3 is the answer hope this helped