Answer:
The average is exactly 26,375 gallons of gas per hour.
How I found this is buy subtracting each numbers like 422,000 - 369,250 = 52,750. 369,250 - 316,500 = 52, 750 and so on. They all ended up being 52,750, but then I realized that they are all 2 hours apart and the question asks of gallons of gas per 1 hour so then I divided 52,750 in half and got my final answer, 26,375.
Step-by-step explanation:
This is how much gas the jet uses per 1 hour
my question doesn't ask me to create a linear model but it asks for gasoline per hour, and it's just like this question with the same graph so if you have the same as me this is the answer.
The A/= it means the answer is okay.
If the slope is 0, then x does not change at all.
take the given y coordinate, and make that the equation.
so y=-9, since the line will never change.
Graph 1 is related to table C because the first 3 values are increasing, and the 4th value decreases. Or because at 1PM, 3PM, and 5PM, the temperature was increasing, but at 7PM the temperature decreased. Graph 1 shows the first 3 points increasing, and then decreasing at the 4th point.
Graph 2 is related to table A because as the time increases/goes on, the temperature decreases exponentially/continues to decrease at a higher rate than before. From 1-3PM the temperate decreases by 2°F, from 3-5PM it decreased by 8°F, from 5-7PM the temperature decreased by 17°F.
Graph 3 is related to table B because as the time increases/goes on, the temperature decreases at a steady rate of 1°F every 2 hours.
We need to figure out how much string would be left, after taking away the first two pieces.
We know that the first piece is 20 inches long, so we can say that there is 52-20 inches left, or 32 inches.
The second piece is between 12 and 18 inches, meaning that there would be between 32-12 and 32-18 inches left for the third piece, or 20 and 14 inches. This means that the third piece would be at least 14 inches long, but no more than 20, since we don’t have more string than that (20+12+20=52, and 20+14+18=52)
So we can say that x is greater or equal to 14, but less than or equal to 20, or:
14<=x<=20 (“<=“ is written like a normal “<“ sign with a line _ right under it)