Bosco

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 #1
avatar+1025 
+2

 

We will have the same amount of money if I give my brother $5. Instead, if he offers me $25, I'll have twice as much cash as he does.  

 

Well........ if he only offers $25 nothing changes.  

He would have to actually hand over the $25.  

But I think I know what you mean.  

 

Let M stand for My original amount  

Let B stand for Brother's original amount   

 

                                                             (M – 5)  =  (B + 5)   

                                                             (M + 25)  =  (2)(B – 25)  

 

                                                              M – 5  =  B + 5   gives us  M = B + 10    (1)  

 

                                                              M + 25  =  2B – 50                                 (2)  

 

Substitute the value of M from (1)   

into the equation (2)                             B + 10 + 25  =  2B – 50   

 

Combine like terms                                          85  =  B    

 

Brother has 85 dollars before they start swapping moneys.   

 

My amount is 95 dollars   

 

Check answer  

 

If I give my brother 5, then I'll have 90 and so will he, so we have the same.  

If my brother gives me 25, then I'll have 120 and my brother will have 60.  

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13 jul 2023
 #1
avatar+1025 
+1

 

I drove to the beach at a rate of 40 miles per hour.  If I had driven at a rate of 50 miles per hour instead, then I would have arrived 45 minutes later.  How many miles did I drive?  

 

You mean 45 minutes earlier.  Obviously, if you drive faster, you get there faster.  

 

This problem makes use of

the following relationship:                   Distance = Velocity x Time 

 

                                                           D  =  V • T  

 

case 1                                                 D  =  (40) • (T)  

 

case 2                                                 D  =  (50) • (T – 45)  

 

Since the Distance, D, is the  

same for both cases, let's set       

the "V•T"s equal to each other.             (50)(T – 45)  =  (40)(T)  

 

                                                               50T – 2250  =  40T  

 

Subtract 40T from both sides                  10T – 2250  =  0  

 

Add 2250 to both sides                                       10T  =  2250  

 

Divide both sides by 10                                           T  =  225   (this is in minutes)  

 

Divide minutes by 60 to get hours                           T  =  225 min / 60 min/hr  =  3.75 hours  

 

Plug this T back into original equation                     D  =  (40 mi/hr) • (3.75 hr)  =  150 miles  

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12 jul 2023
 #1
avatar+1025 
+1

 

I have to paint one side of a wall.  The wall is 12 meters tall and 120 meters long.  Each gallon of paint covers 150 square feet. If a foot is approximately 0.3048 meters, then what is the smallest whole number of gallons I can buy and have enough paint to cover the whole wall? 

 

 

We're going to have to convert metric units to imperial units,  

so I think it's better to do it from the start.  Even though we'll  

have fractions to contend with, a calculator makes that easy.  

 

                                                                       12 m  

1 foot is 0.3048 meter, so the height is       –––––––––  =  39.3701 ft   

                                                                   0.3048 m/ft  

 

                                                                       120 m  

1 foot is 0.3048 meter, so the length is       –––––––––  =  393.7007 ft   

                                                                   0.3048 m/ft  

 

Area is height times length     (39.3701 ft)(393.7007 ft)  =  15,500.0359 sq ft  

 

1 gallon will cover 150 sq ft  

so divide that into the area               15,500.0359 sq ft  

                                                        –––––––––––––––  =  103.3335 gallons  

                                                           150 sq ft/gallon  

 

You can't buy just a third of a gallon of paint,  

so we have to round that up to whole gallons                       104 gallons  

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12 jul 2023
 #1
avatar+1025 
+1

 

One ordered pair (a,b) satisfies the two equations ab^4 = 48 and ab = 72. What is the value of b in this ordered pair?    

 

 

To find b, consider                                                  ab4  =  48  

 

We will divide both sides by ab.  

 

Since ab=72, we will divide the left side  

by "ab" and the right side by its equal 72.  

                                                                              ab4         48  

                                                                             ——   =   ——  

                                                                              ab           72  

Note that ab4 = (ab) * (b3)  

 

Cancel ab out of the left side.  

Reduce 48/72 on the right side.  

                                                                               b3           2  

                                                                             ——   =   ——  

                                                                                1            3  

 

 

                                                                                 b   =   cube root of (2 / 3)  

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12 jul 2023