Yes. Take for example a square and an ellipsis with the same perimeter. The family of ellipses with the same perimeter can have any area between that of a circle to zero (if it is extremely “thin” i.e. if its eccentricity is large). The circle has the maximum area of any other shape with the same perimeter, so the square has the same area of one of the intermediate ellipses.
Okay ShallBeTheLast, what we will do will involve a lot of simple plug and play kind of actions.
To start we must notice one number must be negative and the other should be positive, because the multiplied number is a negative.
Next, lets multiply number that have a sum of 10 (keep in mind one has to be negative and the other has to be positive).
-1 * 10 = -10 false
-2 * 12 = -24 false
-3 * 13 = -39 false
notice that no number working and it's only getting farther away.
There is no solution for this that involves to integers.
I think you might of wrote the question backwards.
If that is the case we would run numbers like.....
-1 * (-6) = 7 false
-2 * (-5) = 10 true!!!!
-2 and -5 would work
Answer:
see attached
Step-by-step explanation:
The graph is a series of horizontal lines. A solid dot goes wherever there is an "or equal to" symbol in the inequality. An open dot goes where the point is not included in the function definition (but nearby points are).
The ball describes a parabola, as you can see in the attached picture. So, the point where the ball strike the ground is the point where the parabola meets the x axis. In fact, the x-axis is the set of points where y=0, which means that the ball has height 0 or -again- it hits the ground.
So, we have to set y=0 in our equation and look for the positive solution. We have
And the positive solution is
So that's the distance from the child where the ball strikes the ground.
The answer is x < 1 or x > 7