the distance (in mi) that a car travels in 45min; s=speed of the car (in m/hr)
what's the question?
that is the question that was in the book.
that's now a question
*not
\[\frac{3}{4}s\text{ }\text{miles} \]
where did you get that from?
there was no information
r t = d s*(45/60) = D
are you a robot? speak to me
I understand the formula, but you have to talk
rate * time = distance. rate = s miles per hour time has to be in hours 45 minutes = 45/60 hours Note: There are no numerical answers here.
this was the question if I am correct -- the distance (in mi) that a car travels in 45min; s=speed of the car (in m/hr)
that's not a question
sorry and im not a robot >.<
not you, I was talking to the guy who was answering, he doesn't talk, he just functions like a robot
What I posted is the best solution given the initial conditions.
what initial conditions?
there were no conditions
it's a statement
The speed or rate is "s" mph. The time is 45 minutes or 0.75 hours. The distance traveled is 0.75 s .
what distance are you talking about!
#15
angelita, copy what was before all those questions
it's like one big question
what distance are you talking about! The distance is ( 0.75 times s ) because "s" cannot be expressed as a number from the problem statement,
\[\sum_{0}^{\infty} \sin(1/n^3)\]
a series that could be represented in your function
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