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lisabon 2012 [21]
3 years ago
10

그if Ella runs 1 mile Monday and runs 3 miles Tuesday and runs 4 miles Thursday and skipped Wednesday how many miles she run in a

ll ➗ it all up ​
Mathematics
1 answer:
photoshop1234 [79]3 years ago
8 0
Ella would run 8 miles
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Only answer #5 <br><br><br>Please help me and thx and if u can answer #6 too if u can
Marianna [84]

Answer:

5. D

6. C

Step-by-step explanation:

<u>Question 5</u>

Lets plug in values of x and y into each equation to see which one works for the entire data set...

y=2x-4

1) Plug in -7 as x and -18 as y:

-18=2(-7)-4

2) Multiply:

-18=-14-4

3) Subtract:

-18=-18

The answers are the same, therefore the correct answer to question 5 is equation D. Keep in mind, you want to check ever single pair of points to make sure it works for all of them, I'm just not going to list that as it would make this answer a lot longer for no reason.

<u>Question 6:</u>

We know that the cost for the boat is $25 as a base price, and also costs an additional $1.30 per day for fuel.

The correct equation is C=25+1.30d, because we are adding 1.3 every single day.

4 0
3 years ago
Not sure if any of this is correct, but it’s what I got so far
Irina18 [472]

Problem 1 is correct. You use the pythagorean theorem to find the hypotenuse.

==================================================

Problem 2 has the correct answer, but one part of the steps is a bit strange. I agree with the 132 ft/sec portion; however, I'm not sure why you wrote \frac{1 \text{ sec}}{132 \text{ ft}}=\frac{0.59\overline{09}}{78 \text{ ft}}*127 \text{ ft}

I would write it as \frac{1\text{ sec}}{132 \text{ ft}}*127 \text{ ft} = \frac{127}{132} \text{ sec} \approx 0.96 \text{ sec}

==================================================

For problem 3, we first need to convert the runner's speed from mph to feet per second.

17.5 \text{ mph} = \frac{17.5 \text{ mi}}{1 \text{ hr}}*\frac{1 \text{ hr}}{60 \text{ min}}*\frac{1 \text{ min}}{60 \text{ sec}}*\frac{5280 \text{ ft}}{1 \text{ mi}} \approx 25.667 \text{ ft per sec}

Since the runner needs to travel 90-12 = 78 ft, this means\text{time} = \frac{\text{distance}}{\text{speed}} \approx \frac{78 \text{ ft}}{25.667 \text{ ft per sec}} \approx 3.039 \text{ sec}

So the runner needs about 3.039 seconds. In problem 2, you calculated that it takes about 0.96 seconds for the ball to go from home to second base. The runner will not beat the throw. The ball gets where it needs to go well before the runner arrives there too.

-------------

The question is now: how much of a lead does the runner need in order to beat the throw?

Well the runner needs to get to second base in under 0.96 seconds.

Let's calculate the distance based on that, and based on the speed we calculated earlier above.

\text{distance} = \text{rate}*\text{time} \approx (25.667 \text{ ft per sec})*(0.96 \text{ sec}) \approx 24.64032 \text{ ft}

This is the distance the runner can travel if the runner only has 0.96 seconds. So the lead needed is 90-24.64032 = 65.35968 feet

This is probably not reasonable considering it's well over halfway (because 65.35968/90 = 0.726 = 72.6%). If the runner is leading over halfway, then the runner is probably already in the running motion and not being stationary.

As you can see, the runner is very unlikely to steal second base. Though of course such events do happen in real life. What may explain this is the reaction time of the catcher may add on just enough time for the runner to steal second base. For this problem however, we aren't considering the reaction time. Also, not all catchers can throw the ball at 90 mph which is quite fast. According to quick research, the MLB says the average catcher speed is about 81.8 mph. This slower throwing speed may account for why stealing second base isn't literally impossible, although it's still fairly difficult.

5 0
3 years ago
I need help again please 5/6-1/6
Murljashka [212]
The answer is 2/3 in lowest terms.
6 0
3 years ago
SOMEONE, PLEASE HELP ME WITH THIS PLSSSS
Stels [109]

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

1. You can use the intercepts to graph the line. The graph of 2x + 3y = 12      crosses the x-axis at (6, 0), so its x-intercept is 6. The graph of 2x + 3y = 12  crosses the y-axis at (0, 4), so its y-intercept is 4.

2. Point-Slope Form: y - y1 = m(x - x1)

Standard Form: ax + by = c

5x - 2y = 10

-2y = -5x + 10

y = (5/2)x - 5    The slope is 5/2.

y - 2 = (-5/2)(x - 10)

y = (-5/2)x + 25 + 2

y = (-5/2)x + 27      The slope is -5/2.

y = (-5/2)x - 10     The slope is -5/2.

5 0
3 years ago
A student is driving a car at 60.0 miles/hour. what is its speed in m/s
hodyreva [135]
60 miles per hour.
So there are 3600 seconds in 1 hour.
60/3600

5 0
4 years ago
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