I need help with a small math question!!!
I need to divie 1/2 hr by 24. please help? Would I convert .30?
....wait huh? you need to explain a half hour...by 24? if thats true....is a half hour only 30% of an hour? ..no it's half....so 50% so what is 50% times 24 ****convert 50% to .50...so .50 times 24
Will give medal. :)
No sorry this is what I'm trying to say... Find the percent of each school day (based upon a 24-hour day) budgeted for the following activites. Find to the nearest whole percent. Show all of your work. Bible study 1/2 hr.
So i have to convert to 1/2 hr so I can divide by 24.
Does that make sense? I hope?
hmm...i have to think about it lol anyone else feel free to intervene :)
So bible study would be 1/48 which is approximately 2%.
1/2 hr = 0.5 hours 0.5/24 = 0.0208333 multiply this by 100 to get 2.08333%
U multiply 24 by 2 to get the 1/2 hrs., and then do 1/48 which is 2.0833333333333333333 which rounds to 2%
oh true, forgot to round to the nearest whole percent
ok so you take 42 times 2 ant then multiply by 1/48?
Is that correct? Or am I still missing this? :)
No, u take 24x2 to get the # of 1/2 hrs. and since BS is 1/2 hr. it is one of the classes out of the 48 1/2 hrs. 1/48 is 2.083333333%, which rounds to 2%
Do u get it now? What grade is this for?
oh ok that makes more sense. Thank you! :) It is 12 grade consumer mathematics. I know it was easy but for some reason it was that one I was missing. :) Thank you.
Could you possibly answer a 6th grade algebra 2 question?
Yes I think I could! :) Hopefully. :0 :)
A volume of 13 milliliters of hydrogen gas has a temperature of -11 degrees C. The pressure was held constant. What is the new volume of this gas if the temperature changes to 98 degrees C? Give your answer to the nearest millimeter.
can u answer this?
I think the whole point is to find the volume... So.. Let's see..
could u help me???
Umm I'm thinking.. and researching.. Just a minute.. :)
you would use Charle's law http://www.iun.edu/~cpanhd/C101webnotes/gases/charleslaw.html
Hmm.. I'm not quite sure about this I'm sorry.. :/ :(
but this is a physic question that's better asked in the physics section and unfortunately I'm not that great at physics, so I won't be of much help (but I am a bit familiar with this gas law)
Thanks for your help anyway, GodBleesYou
It was on our 6th grade algebra 2 homework
i see, well that's an odd algebra question since it's more physics than anything
How do u ask it on the physics section
but I guess it does involve math, so that makes sense
Are you doing Abeka math?
check out the link I posted to get an idea how to do it
OK, Thank You
What's Abeka math?
It's a homeschool curriculum and this sounds like a question from it. :)
Oh, well our Alg 2 teacher says he is using a test generator, but it might be that curriculum.
Do either of you know how to convert from polar to rectangular coordinates? Please show ALL work
GodBlessYou, do you know how to convert from polar to rectangular coordinates?
use x = r*cos(theta) y = r*sin(theta)
So, what would u do for 3 angle -189?
???????????????
r = 3 and theta = -189 it looks like
plug them in to find x and y
Thank You
Are u guys still there?
Sorry had shut my computer down. :) @soph123
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