Now cos⁻¹(0.7) is about 45.6°, that's on the first quadrant.
keep in mind that the inverse cosine function has a range of [0, 180°], so any angles it will spit out, will be on either the I quadrant where cosine is positive or the II quadrant, where cosine is negative.
however, 45.6° has a twin, she's at the IV quadrant, where cosine is also positive, and that'd be 360° - 45.6°, or 314.4°.
now, those are the first two, but we have been only working on the [0, 360°] range.... but we can simply go around the circle many times over up to 720° or 72000000000° if we so wish, so let's go just one more time around the circle to find the other fellows.
360° + 45.6° is a full circle and 45.6° more, that will give us the other angle, also in the first quadrant, but after a full cycle, at 405.6°.
then to find her twin on the IV quadrant, we simply keep on going, and that'd be at 360° + 360° - 45.6°, 674.4°.
and you can keep on going around the circle, but only four are needed this time only.
Answer:
3/4 hour or 45 minutes
It will take 0.75 hours or 45 minutes or 2700 seconds to paint one wall according to the rate we're given.
:)
Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:
Raising a number to the 1/2 power is the same as square rooting it. Raising something to the 1/2 power is the same as asking for 2 equal factors that can be multiplied together to give you that number. For example,
is 3, but 9^1/2 is also 3.
Answer:
Description
Step-by-step explanation:
a. 2 solutions
b. 2 imaginary solutions
c. If the discriminant is positive, then it will have 2 real solutions as the square root of a positive number always equals a positive number. If the discriminant is negative, the quadratic equation will have 2 imaginary solutions, as the square root of a negative number is always imaginary. If the discriminant equals 0, it will have only 1 real solution.
Answer:
can i get your snap?
Step-by-step explanation: