The quantity of water the farming conglomerate would use 17 years from now is 65,708.11.
<h3>What is the amount of water that would be used 17 years from now?</h3>
The formula for calculating the amount of water that would be needed 1 years from now:
FV = P (1 + r)^N
- FV = Future value
- P = Present value
- R = interest rate
- N = number of years
13000 x 1.1^17 = 65,708.11
To learn more about future value, please check: brainly.com/question/18760477
Answer:
B and C are both correct
Step-by-step explanation:
18/6 = 3
h¹⁰/h¹² = h⁽¹⁰⁻¹²⁾ = h⁻² = 1/h²
the a⁻⁴ term remains unchanged and = 1/a⁴
3a⁻⁴h⁻² = 
Lets say x is quantity
65%x+25%(600-x)=45%of 600
.65x+.25(600-x)=.45*600
.65x+150-0.25x=270
0.4x=120
x=300ml
9514 1404 393
Answer:
C ≈ 0.00106455765168
Step-by-step explanation:
This is the sum of 13 terms of the geometric series that has 10000C/1.05 as the first term and a common ratio of 1/1.05. The sum S is given by ...
S = a1(1 -r^n)/(1 -r) . . . . a1 is the first term, r is the common ratio
Using the known values, we have ...
100 = (10000C/1.05)(1 -1.05^-13)/(1 -1/1.05))
0.01 = C(1 -1.05^-13)/0.05
C = 0.0005/(1 -1.05^-13) ≈ 0.0005/0.469679
C ≈ 0.00106455765168