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amid [387]
3 years ago
14

I need help with this worksheet, its due on sunday 1/16/2022

Mathematics
1 answer:
natta225 [31]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

See attached

Step-by-step explanation:

Hopefully you can read it okay, the graphs were quite small.

-> I cannot answer the last three accurately

Have a nice day!

     I hope this is what you are looking for, but if not - comment! I will edit and update my answer accordingly. (ノ^∇^)

- Heather

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Mr. Garcia went on a long drive. When he started, there were 9 gallons of gas in his tank. After he had driven 26 miles, there w
Lyrx [107]

Answer:

y=-1 x=26 (26,-1)

Step-by-step explanation:

We know that Mr. Garcia drives 26 miles per gallon, this means that the slope will be (26,-1)

6 0
3 years ago
Plz I need help and a explanation plz because I need to do more of them and I don’t get how to do them
lisabon 2012 [21]

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

When two parallel lines are crossed by another line, adjacent angles will always sum to 180 degrees.

x+114=180

x=66 degrees

7 0
3 years ago
Math problem help me
Ratling [72]

Answer:

y=3x+2

Step-by-step explanation:

To find the equation, use the slope-intercept formula:

y=mx+b

m is the slope and b is the y-intercept. Now, it'll really help to draw a line through the points, connecting them. If you look at point (0,2), we can see that this is the y-intercept (where a point sits on the y-axis when x=0). You can insert this into the equation by taking the y value:

(0,2)\\y=mx+2

Now, take any two points to find the slope. To make it easier, I'll use (1,5) and (0,2). Use the slope formula for when you know two points:

\frac{y(2)-y(1)}{x(2)-(x1)} =\frac{rise}{run}

Rise over run is the change in the y-axis over the change in the x-axis. Insert values:

(1(x1),5(y1))\\(0(x2),2(y2))\\\\\frac{2-5}{0-1}

Solve:

\frac{2-5}{0-1}=\frac{-3}{-1}

Since both are negative, the result is a positive:

\frac{-3}{-1}=\frac{3}{1} =3

Insert this into the equation as m, the slope:

y=3x+2

Done.

6 0
3 years ago
What is the difference between advanced calculus and real analysis?
eduard
<span>The content of any course depends on where you take it--- even two courses with the title "real analysis" at different schools can cover different material (or the same material, but at different levels of depth).

But yeah, generally speaking, "real analysis" and "advanced calculus" are synonyms. Schools never offer courses with *both* names, and whichever one they do offer, it is probably a class that covers the subject matter of calculus, but in a way that emphasizes the logical structure of the material (in particular, precise definitions and proofs) over just doing calculation.

My impression is that "advanced calculus" is an "older" name for this topic, and that "real analysis" is a somewhat "newer" name for the same topic. At least, most textbooks currently written in this area seem to have titles with "real analysis" in them, and titles including the phrase "advanced calculus" are less common. (There are a number of popular books with "advanced calculus" in the title, but all of the ones I've seen or used are reprints/updates of books originally written decades ago.)

There have been similar shifts in other course names. What is mostly called "complex analysis" now in course titles and textbooks, used to be called "function theory" (sometimes "analytic function theory" or "complex function theory"), or "complex variables". You still see some courses and textbooks with "variables" in the title, but like "advanced calculus", it seems to be on the way out, and not on the way in. The trend seems to be toward "complex analysis."  hope it helps

</span>
8 0
3 years ago
Find the distance between the points ( – 9, – 4) and ( – 4,8).
Dmitriy789 [7]

Answer:

Distance=13\ units

Step-by-step explanation:

<u><em>Distance between two points:</em></u> Distance between two pints (x_1,y_1)\ and\ (x_2,y_2) is given by

d=\sqrt{(x_2-x_1)^2+(y_2-y_1)^2}

Distance between (-9,-4)\ and\ (-4,8).

d=\sqrt{(-4-(-9))^2+(8-(-4))^2}\\\\d=\sqrt{(-4+9)^2+(8+4)^2}\\\\d=\sqrt{(5)^2+(12)^2}=\sqrt{25+144}\\\\d=\sqrt{169}\\\\d=13

6 0
3 years ago
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