You could easily do that yourself, with a pencil, and about the same amount of time it took you to post the question here.
If you go through and try them . . . 1/1, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5 . . . etc., you'll find
that the thirds, sixths, sevenths, and ninths produce repeating decimals.
The oneths, tooths, fourths, fifths, eighths, and tenths don't.
Answer:
3.48 hours
Step-by-step explanation:
The equation is:
Where
M(t) is the amount of medication remaining in mg
t is the time it takes, in hours
The questions asks HOW LONG it will take to make the remaining medication to 1 milligrams (1 mg)??
We have to substitute M(t) with "1" and find the corresponding value of "t". We will use natural log to solve this. Shown below:
<u>Note: </u> Ln(e) = 1
This means, the amount of time it will take is about 3.48 hours
15 = 3*5
64= 2*2*2*2*2*2
There are no common factors so the GCF is 1
Step-by-step explanation:
5m³ + 2m - 7m³ - 8m
= -2m³ -6m
= -2m(m² + 3)