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Mathematics 20 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

4,879 km, times the scale (0.0000000072)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Can someone tell me there answer

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\[4.879kmtimes7.2\times10^{-9}=15.1288\times10^{-9}km\]\[=1.51288\times10^{-8}km\]\[=1.513\times10^{-8}km\]

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thats not any of my answers.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

what are the answer then?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

This is how it was explained to me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

So, if the Sun were a 10-meter sphere, how big would Jupiter be? To find that out, you multiply the diameter of Jupiter, which is 142,984 km, times the scale (0.0000000072). If you get out your trusty calculator, you will find that Jupiter would be 0.00103 km or 1.03 meters in diameter. This means, if the Sun were a 10-meter sphere, Jupiter would be just over 1 meter in diameter or about 1/10 the size of the Sun. You can divide the diameter of Jupiter by the diameter of the Sun to see if this is correct!

OpenStudy (campbell_st):

the answer to you problem is 3.513 cm.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it is multiply the both......4879x7.2×10−9

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