Angle of taller building Tan 45° = opposite (height of the building)/ adjacent 50 feet (distance between Kathy and the taller building
Tan 45° = 1
Height of taller building from eye level = multiplying adjacent 50 feet * Angle (Tan 45°) 1 = 50 feet opposite
Angle of smaller building Tan 38° = 0.781
Height of smaller building from eye level = Angle * adjacent 50 feet = 39.06 feet
Difference of eye level from ground is 5 feet
Taller building height is 50 + 5
Total height of taller building is 55 feet.
Smaller building height is 39.06 + 5
Total height of smaller building is 44.06 feet
Answer:
18
Step-by-step explanation:
y > x + 1
(–3, 2)
(–1, 3)
(0, 2)
(1, 2)
(2, –1)
(2, 2)
Answer:
(1,2) and (2,2) since blue is a solid line
Step-by-step explanation:
To prove if a point satisfies the inequalities,find the point in the point that both inequalities overlap. In the picture, this is colored purple (both pink and blue/purple).
Answer:
(1,2) and (2,2) makes true
Step-by-step explanation:
y < 5x + 2
y >=1/2(x) + 1
(–3, 2)
Plug in the ordered pair (x,y) in each inequality
2 < 5(-3) + 2 -----> false
(–1, 3)
3< 5(-1) + 2 --------> false
(0, 2)
2 < 5(0) + 2 -------> false
(1, 2)
2 < 5(1) + 2 ---------> True
2 >=(1/2)1 + 1 ----------->True
(2, –1)
-1 < 5(2) + 2 ---------> True
-1>= (1/2)(2) + 1 -----------> false
(2, 2)
2 < 5(2) + 2 ---------> True
2>= (1/2)(2) + 1 -----------> True
Answer:
Jim will incur a loss of $2,400 in the 60-day period under review
Step-by-step explanation:
The question is incomplete. However, one assumption was made in attempting the question, ie, the timeframe was set at 60-days:
Jim likes to day-trade on the internet. On a good day, he averages a $1100 gain. On a bad day, he averages a $900 loss. Suppose that he has good days 25% of the time, bad days 35% of he time, and the rest of the time he breaks even, *what is Jim's balance after a 60-day period* ?
Solution
From the question, given period X = 60 days, and;
Jim's streak is as follows: 0.25X Profit : 0.35X Loss : (100 - (0.25+0.35) Even
Jim's streak = 0.25*60 : 0.35*60 : 0.4*60 = 15 + 21 + 24 (days)
15 profitable days = 15 * $1100 = $16,500
21 bad days 21*$900 = $18,900
24 even days = 24*$0 = $0
Balance after 60 days = $16500+(-$18900)+$0 = $16500-$18900 = -$2400
The expected daily value for Jim's day-trading hobby is -$40, meaning he should expect to lose $40 per day. Over three weeks of trading every weekday, this amounts to a total expected loss of -$600.
The subject of this question is expected value, a concept in probability and statistics, which essentially means the average result of a large number of trials in an experiment. In Jim's case, three possible outcomes are concerning his day-trading hobby: a good day ($1100 gain), a bad day ($900 loss), and a break-even day ($0 gain or loss).
Here's how we calculate:
The expected value of one day of trading for Jim is thus: $275 - $315 + $0 = -$40.
If Jim trades every weekday for three weeks (that is, 15 days), we can multiply the daily expected value by 15. So, Jim should expect to lose $40 * 15 = -$600 over three weeks.
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The complete question is given below:
Jim likes to day-trade on the Internet. On a good day. he averages a $1100 gain. On a bad day, he averages a $900 loss. Suppose that he has good days 25% of the time, bad days 35% of the time, and the rest of the time he breaks even.
a. What is the expected value for one day of Jim's day-trading hobby?
b. If Jim day-trades every weekday for three weeks, how much money should he expect to win or lose?
There are 5π/3 radians in 300 degrees.
To convert degrees to radians, we can use the formula:
Radians = Degrees x (π / 180)
Given that we want to convert 300 degrees to radians, we can plug this value into the formula:
Radians = 300 x (π / 180)
Simplifying this expression, we get:
Radians = 5π/3
Therefore, there are 5π/3 radians in 300 degrees.
Learn more about radians here;
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