Please Help Will award you with 3 medals
@MaddieLB Yay
Wow, I do not get this at all lol
Maybe @triciaal can help you ;)
Thanks I have no Clue I am in 9th grade why would they do this to me I am so close to passing this class and getting a credit uhhhh
I honestly dont even remember learning this
IDK how I am going to use this in my lifetime *confused
@triciaal help me please
3 medal uhhhh help
50=50/subscript0 / e times 0.1133t idk ….BUT WHY WOULD THEY TEACH U THIS IN 9th GRADE?!!! This is like, idk…11th grade XD I don’t even remember this But they give you variables, see, N= 50 I think, and k = 0.1133…but idk t cause they don’t give you t…and what’s e? O.o
sorry that I cant help...:(
Its fine I was about to ask you if you could speak English not Mathinese
Lol GG dude
that's hilarious xD I could solve this but there seems to be variables missing...hmm did u try to google it yet
Yes I did Lol
Uhh dont you love it when you spend 33 minutes on 2 question
This is torture
mmm..i never have that problem (well... actually I'm a grad and addicted to hard, almost impossible-to-solve problems)
xD
@mathmate @triciaal is this possible to solve with so few variables?! I'm stumped
Lol @mathmate Is so mean but so cool
I got in a fight with him on my first question xD
@mathmate is a genius...but he/she is rather stern...
xD this is soooo stupid
xD IK to bad albert Enstien is dead
Einstein would have a lot of catching up 2 do...
Yeah maybe a little xD
@Mathmale yay
the hardest problem ive found today besides this: √3√7 that was actually easy.. 6√7
e is a constant, base of the Naperian logarithm, or natural log, e=2.7182818284.... approximately. All the constants and variables are given. What is needed is not stated, though.
brb guys gtg to the bathroom
I suppose you are expected to fill in the constants and make an equation that shows the concentration of the drug at any time t after the drug was administered. A grade 9 student would be fully expected to plug in a few numbers, wouldn't he? :) BTW, you can leave e as e, since it is a universal constant like \(\pi\).
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