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weeeeeb [17]
3 years ago
5

A motorist takes 80 minutes to travel 120km. find his speed

Mathematics
1 answer:
sergeinik [125]3 years ago
6 0

Answer: 90km/hour

Step-by-step explanation:

The formula for speed is given as:

= Distance / Time

where,

Distance = 120km

Time = 80 minutes = 80/60 = 1 1/3 hours

Speed = Distance / Time

= 120 / 1 1/3

= 120 / 4/3

= 120 × 3/4

= 90km/hour

The speed is 90km/hour.

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How to do improper fractions with 3.8 repeating
vivado [14]
3.88888=3.88888/1=38.8888888

so lets ssay our repeating decimal = a fraction x
x=3.888 is true
multiply by 10
10x=38.8888
now subtract fir frist eqation from second
10x-x=38.8888-3.888888
9x=35
divide both sides by 9
x=35/9
x=3 and 7/9

anser is 3.88=3 and 7/9

3 0
3 years ago
Find the solution to the system of equations.
Anestetic [448]

Answer:

it should be A but im not fully sure

5 0
3 years ago
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Which equation can be used to solve for the measure of angle abc? tan(x) = startfraction 2.4 over 10 endfraction tan(x) = startf
Len [333]

The equation can be used to solve for the measure of angle abc is sinx = 2.4/10.3

<h3 /><h3>SOH CAH TOA identity</h3>

The identity is used to find the measure of sides and acute angles of a right triangle

From the diagram shown, <ABC is the reference abgle hence;

Opposite side = 2,4cm

Hypotenuse .=10.3cm

According to the identity

sin x = opp/hyp

sinx = 2.4/10.3
sinx = 0.233

x =  13.47 degrees

Hence the equation can be used to solve for the measure of angle abc is sinx = 2.4/10.3

Learn more on SOH CAH TOA here: brainly.com/question/20734777

3 0
2 years ago
Which is the smallest number in this set of numbers? <br> A. √8<br> B. 14/5<br> C. 2.28<br> D. 2.288
-Dominant- [34]

Answer:

B.

Step-by-step explanation:

a = 2.828

b = 2.800

c = 2.288

d = 2.288

8 0
3 years ago
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Prove that it is impossible to dissect a cube into finitely many cubes, no two of which are the same size.
solniwko [45]

explanation:

The sides of a cube are squares, and they are covered by the respective sides of the cubes covering that side of the big cube. If we can show that a sqaure cannot be descomposed in squares of different sides, then we are done.

We cover the bottom side of that square with the bottom side of smaller squares. Above each square there is at least one square. Those squares have different heights, and they can have more or less (but not equal) height than the square they have below.

There is one square, lets call it A, that has minimum height among the squares that cover the bottom line, a bigger sqaure cannot fit above A because it would overlap with A's neighbours, so the selected square, lets call it B, should have less height than A itself.

There should be a 'hole' between B and at least one of A's neighbours, this hole is a rectangle with height equal to B's height. Since we cant use squares of similar sizes, we need at least 2 squares covering the 'hole', or a big sqaure that will form another hole above B, making this problem inifnite. If we use 2 or more squares, those sqaures height's combined should be at least equal than the height of B. Lets call C the small square that is next to B and above A in the 'hole'. C has even less height than B (otherwise, C would form the 'hole' above B as we described before). There are 2 possibilities:

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If the second case would be true, next to C and above A there should be another 'hole', making this problem infinite. Assuming the first case is true, then C would fit perfectly above A and between B and A's neighborhood.  Leaving a small rectangle above it that was part of the original hole.

That small rectangle has base length similar than the sides of C, so it cant be covered by a single square. The small sqaure you would use to cover that rectangle that is above to C and next to B, lets call it D, would leave another 'hole' above C and between D and A's neighborhood.

As you can see, this problem recursively forces you to use smaller and smaller squares, to a never end. You cant cover a sqaure with a finite number of squares and, as a result, you cant cover a cube with finite cubes.

3 0
4 years ago
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