C - (0.40c - 0.15) - (0.60c - 0.20)
I hope this helps :)
Answer:
I don't think so.
Step-by-step explanation:
1/2p-(1/4p-4)
1/2p-(1-16p/4p)
(2p-1+16p)/4p
(18p-1)/4p
2(9p-1)/4p
9p-1/2p
The weight of an object is the product of its mass and the acceleration of gravity.
If g[e] is the acceleration of gravity on earth, and g[M] the same for Mars and g[m] the same for the moon,
then m[M]=m[e]g[M]/g[e] and m[m]=m[e]g[m]/g[e] where m[ ] denotes mass. Note that weight=mg (measured in newtons) while mass is in kilograms.
If g[M]=g[e]/3 and g[m]=g[e]/6 approximately. Then the weight of an object on Mars will be about a third of what it is on earth, while on the moon it would be about a sixth of what it is on earth.
If it says five more than it means the 5 is after, and quantity of a number means it’s in parentheses so it would have to be C.
Answer:
sample 1: 75
sample 2: 86
Step-by-step explanation: