5 is your answer . i hate permutations
Answer: Polygon Q's area is 1/4 of Polygon P's area
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Explanation:
Imagine we had a square with side length 8. The area of this square is 8*8 = 64.
Now let's reduce each side of the square by the scale factor 1/2. So each new side is 8*(1/2) = 4. The area of this smaller square is 4*4 = 16.
Comparing the new area (16) to the old one (64), we see that the new area is 16/64 = 1/4 of the old area.
In other words,
new smaller area = (1/4)*(old larger area)
So this is one example to see why (1/2)*(1/2) = 1/4 is the area scale factor based on the linear scale factor of 1/2. In short, (1/2)^2 = 1/4. Whatever the original scale factor is, square it and you'll get the area scale factor.
5: 5, 10,15,20,25 ( Not sure if 5 counts as one, if it does not, then 30 is another multiple.)
Answer:
B (1,0)
Step-by-step explanation:
hello :<span>
<span>an equation of the circle Center at the
A(a,b) and ridus : r is :
(x-a)² +(y-b)² = r²
in this exercice : a = -7 and b = -1 (Center at: A(-7,-1) )
r = AP.... P(8,7)
r² = (AP)²
r² = (8+7)² +(7+1)² =225+64=289 ...... so : r = 17
an equation of the circle that satisfies the stated conditions.
Center at </span></span>A(-7,-1), passing through P(8, 7) is :
(x+7)² +(y+1)² = 289
The point (-15,y ) <span>lies on this circle : (-15+7)² +(y+1)² = 289....(subsct : x= -15)
(y+1)² = 225
(y+1)² = 15²
y+1 = 15 or y+1 = -15
y = 14 or y = -16
you have two points : (-15,14) , (-15, -16)</span>