Answer: OPTION C.
Step-by-step explanation:
For this exercise it is important to remember the following:

Knowing this and based on the information provided in the exercise, you can make the conversion from kilograms to ounces. This is:

According to the exercise, Miriam's procedure was:

So you can identify that she made a mistake.
Notice that:
1. Miriaim multiplied correctly.
2. Butt the third fraction should be
and not
.
Answer:
0.68L per dispenser
Step-by-step explanation:
Big bottle contain 213L of soap.
Big bottle will fill 312 dispensers.
This means 1 each dispenser can take 213/312 litres = 0.68L per dispenser.
Answer:
option D
Step-by-step explanation:
x-2y≥-12
-2y≥-x-12
y≤0.5x+6
has to be a solid line since y is less than or equal to 0.5x+6
so, options 1 and 3 are not applicable
also, in y≤0.5x+6 , y is less than or equal to this line, thus it only exists on the line and to the right of it (below it)
so, option 2 is wrong also, leaving us with option 4 or D, which in this case is the answer
I attached a file of this inequality's graph to prove my answer once more
Answer:
(A) 0.15625
(B) 0.1875
(C) Can't be computed
Step-by-step explanation:
We are given that the amount of time it takes for a student to complete a statistics quiz is uniformly distributed between 32 and 64 minutes.
Let X = Amount of time taken by student to complete a statistics quiz
So, X ~ U(32 , 64)
The PDF of uniform distribution is given by;
f(X) =
, a < X < b where a = 32 and b = 64
The CDF of Uniform distribution is P(X <= x) =
(A) Probability that student requires more than 59 minutes to complete the quiz = P(X > 59)
P(X > 59) = 1 - P(X <= 59) = 1 -
= 1 -
=
= 0.15625
(B) Probability that student completes the quiz in a time between 37 and 43 minutes = P(37 <= X <= 43) = P(X <= 43) - P(X < 37)
P(X <= 43) =
=
= 0.34375
P(X < 37) =
=
= 0.15625
P(37 <= X <= 43) = 0.34375 - 0.15625 = 0.1875
(C) Probability that student complete the quiz in exactly 44.74 minutes
= P(X = 44.74)
The above probability can't be computed because this is a continuous distribution and it can't give point wise probability.
It would be “Allen” since his percentage is far more grater then the rest, even Roneisha because even though her percentage is 1% greater, she has less pages, Ben has more pages but has 1% less.
Basically it’s like 2 bikers racing, 1 biker is faster but can’t go 5 miles, but the other is not that fast but can go 5+ miles.
Now who can go further, it would be the slow one.