The design of a digital box camera maximizes the volume while keeping the sum of the dimensions at 6 inches. If the length must be 1.5 time the height, what should each dimension be?
Answers
Answer 1
Answer:
which simplifies to
and so we take the derivative of that function in terms of l
then we set that to 0
using the quadratic formula
simplifying..
at this point i noticed an error, i used l instead of h... but thats ok
pluggin 0 and 1.6 for h, lets check answers 1.6: h=1.6 l=2.4 w=2 0: h=0 l=0 w=6
so the answer is h=1.6 l=2.4 w=2, which gives the greatest volume of 7.68
You are rolling two dice at the same time. what is the probability of a rolling a sum of 5 or 9?
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5 would equal about 11 percent. 9 would equal 1/9 or about 7 - 10 percent.
2 out of 12 probabilitity
1. Graph the linear equation y - 1 = 2 (x - 2)2. Graph the linear equation 4x + 6y = -12
3. Graph the function f (x) = -3/2x - 2
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y - 1 = 2 (x - 2) is the red graph. 4x + 6y = -12 is the blue graph. f (x) = -x - 2 is the green graph. :)
What does -1-6x-6>-11-7x equal
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Hey there, first, we simplify -6x-7>-7x-11, second, add 7x to both sides, -6x-7+7x>-7x-11+7x=x-7>-11, third, add 7 to both sides, x-7+7>-11+7=x>-4. Therefore, the answer is x>-4
You have 60 marbles in a jar, two of which are red. (so 2 red, 58 not red)You pick 10 at random. What is the chance that you draw both red marbles? Explanation please, not just the answer. Brainliest answer if you calculate it for 2 out of 251 total marbles as well.
Answers
Well, I agonized over this for a while, and I have something that we may want to consider.
The only probability formula I know how to use is
Probability = (number of possible successes) / (total number of possibilities).
Can we work with that ? Let's see . . .
The denominator of that fraction is the total number of ways to draw 10 marbles from a jar of 60 . . .
The first draw can be any one of 60 marbles. For each of those . . . The second draw can be any one of the remaining 59. For each of those . . . The third draw can be any one of the remaining 58. . . etc.
So the total number of ways to draw 10 from 60 is
(60 x 59 x 58 x 57 x 56 x 55 x 54 x 53 x 52 x 51)
That's a very big number. My calculator says something that rounds to 2.736 x 10¹⁷. But my calculator only shows 10 digits, so it can't show all 18 digits in the number. Fortunately, we don't need to see the whole number written out. We'll just write it in factorial notation, and go on to do the numerator of the fraction, which is going to be much harder.
That number that we just found is equal to (60!) / (50!) . It's going to be the denominator of the big fraction.
Now for the numerator. That's going to be the number of ways that the two red marbles can be included among the ten marbles drawn.
One red marble can be any one of the 10 marbles pulled out. For each of those . . . The other red marble can be any one of the other 9 that are picked.
So there are (10 x 9) = 90 ways for the selected 10 to include both red ones.
SO ! Now, the probability that the ten that are drawn will include the two red ones should be (it might be, it could be) . . .
90 divided by (60! / 50!) .
Remember, that fraction on the right is just total number of ways to pick 10 out of 60 . The probability of including both red ones in the draw is 90 divided by that number. It's very small.
Again from my calculator, it's 3.29 x 10⁻¹⁴ percent.
I have no confidence in my answer, but I invite you to look it over, along with all the real gurus out there.
If I'm wrong, then I've stolen only 5 points that I'm not entitled to, and at least I did put some effort into it.
Here you have two proportions. 2/60 and 10/60. I would cross multiply. Giving you 20/120. Simplify that to get 1/6. So you have a 1 in 6 chance of getting both the red marbles. (I'm not 100% sure since it's been a while so you might want to get a second opinion.) Not sure what you mean by the second part, but hope I provided some help :)
Is 12 noon in New York. What time is it in Denver?