Answer:
A sinusoidal model would be used
The kind of function that have consistency in the periodic rate of change is the Average rate of changes
Step-by-step explanation:
The type of model that would be used is sinusoidal model and this is because there is periodic change in the values given ( i.e the rate of changes given )
For percentage rate of changes :
starting from 0.9% there is an increase to 1.3% then a decrease to 1.1% and a further decrease to 1% before an increase to 1.3% and another decrease to 1%
For Average rate of changes:
starting from 2.9 there is a decrease to 2.4, then an increase to 3.7 and another decrease to 3.1 followed by an increase to 3.6 and a decrease back to 3.2
This relation ( sinusoidal model ) is best suited for a linear model because there is a periodic rate of change in the functions
The kind of function that have consistency in the period rate of change is the Average rate of changes
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
m=p/3
t=(3/10)(1-1/3)
t=(3/10)(2/3)=p/5
p-p/3-p/5=35
(15p-5p-3p)/15=35
7p/15=35
7p=525
p=75
So the book has 75 pages.
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
A.AAS
B.
∠TSU=∠RQU
∠TUS=∠RUQ
TU=RU
Answer:
D.) Step 6: student needed to add the b value.
Step-by-step explanation:
I got it wrong and it gave me the right answer, which is what i provided, D.
Hi there
So, if the track is 1/8 of a mile, let's call every lap a "one-eighth mile" run. We know John ran 24 laps, or that he ran 24 "one-eighth miles," just consecutive, one right after another. Let's stop worrying about rates or tricks or math for a second, and just ask: how many real miles is 24 "one-eighth" miles? We know it's less than 24---a lot less, since you have to go around 8 times just to get to 1 mile. Well wait, if we go around 8 times, we get 1 mile. That means if we go around 28, or 16 times, we get 2 miles; And let's just think to the next full mile---if we go 38, or 24 times, we get 3 miles. He did go around 24 times, so he must have run 3 miles on a 1/8 track.
Division and multiplication are inverses of each other. So we solved this by looking for an intuition for how many full miles corresponded to how many laps, with a bunch of steps of multiplication. But you can cut right to the chase and solve it faster with division---24 laps * 1 mile per 8 laps, means:
total distance = 24 Lap (1 mi / 8 Lap) total distance = 24/8 total distance = 3