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Mathematics 8 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

How far is Earth from the Sun? AU=1 miles? kilometers? It keeps saying I'm wrong

OpenStudy (anonymous):

92,960,000 miles (149,600,000 km)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so yeah pretty much just 1 AU

OpenStudy (anonymous):

What about Human Body Temp 98.6 degrees Celsius? I got 37 Kelvin? I got 372

OpenStudy (anonymous):

and.. How long does it take for Earth to go around the Sun? 1 year days? I got 365 minutes? I got 525600 seconds? I got 31536000

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes both of those answers are correct

OpenStudy (anonymous):

It keeps saying... One or more of your answers are incorrect. You need to be within 2% of the correct answer for each conversion to proceed.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

maybe the kelvin needs to be exact? try 371.75

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I have tried, same message..

OpenStudy (anonymous):

is the last one regarding days, minutes, seconds seem correct?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

525,969 minutes to revolve

OpenStudy (anonymous):

same message ;/

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hmm i don't know what you have to do then.. sorry ill see if someone else can help you

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@amistre64

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Okay, thank you.

OpenStudy (amistre64):

without knowing the requirements of your formatting, the best we can do is give approximates id spose

OpenStudy (anonymous):

All it says is... In science, you need to be comfortable with different units. Units of distance, time, mass, and so on that are good enough for your everyday experiences fall far short when we discuss miniscule objects like atoms or ginormous objects like stars and galaxies. You should at least be familiar with the metric system, as science uses this simple system (where all units are multiples of 10 of other units). Even if you're not comfortable using it, you should be able to convert to it. Use this opportunity (and Google) to convert the numbers into the different units listed. Click "Verify" to check your answers and continue. then asks those questions.

OpenStudy (amistre64):

do you need to present them in scientific notation?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no, because when I did it automatically corrected it to the actual number.

OpenStudy (amistre64):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_unit the others i got no idea about at the moment

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