Integrate both sides with respect to <em>t</em> :
∫ d<em>y</em>/d<em>t</em> d<em>t</em> = ∫ -12<em>t</em> ² d<em>t</em>
<em>y(t)</em> = -4<em>t</em> ³ + <em>C</em>
Use the initial condition to solve for <em>C</em> :
5 = -4•0³+ <em>C</em>
<em>C</em> = 5
So
<em>y(t)</em> = -4<em>t</em> ³ + 5
and the answer is D.
Alternatively, you can directly apply the fundamental theorem of calculus:



22.
Alternate angles23.
4: (

, substitute b with 10 and a with 20 and you get 4.)
24.
0.28: 0.12 + 0.60 = 0.72. Probability is always out of 1, so 1 - 0.72 should give you the probability of losing, which is 0.28.
Answer:
I only know the first one....
4+2+1=7
49p/7= 7p
4units:2units:1units
4×7p= 28p
2×7p= 14p
1×7p= 7p
divided it is...
28p:14p:7p
Answer:
4y-x
Step-by-step explanation:
Combine like-terms.
6y-2y and -3x+2x
Do the Math
4y and -x
4y-x
Hi!
One deck of card has 52 cards, and in every deck there are 4 queens.
We will find the probability of pulling out the queen from the deck by diving the number of queens by the number of cards in the deck, like this:
4/52 = 1/13
Hope this helps!