Contemporary Mathematics For Business & Consumers, Brief Edition, Loose-leaf Version
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781305867192
Author: Robert Brechner, Geroge Bergeman
Publisher: South-Western College Pub
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 1.III, Problem 18RE
To determine
To calculate: The value of the division,
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
1.2.19. Let and s be natural numbers. Let G be the simple graph with vertex set
Vo... V„−1 such that v; ↔ v; if and only if |ji| Є (r,s). Prove that S has exactly k
components, where k is the greatest common divisor of {n, r,s}.
Question 3
over a field K.
In this question, MË(K) denotes the set of n × n matrices
(a) Suppose that A Є Mn(K) is an invertible matrix. Is it always true that A is
equivalent to A-¹? Justify your answer.
(b) Let B be given by
8
B = 0 7 7
0 -7 7
Working over the field F2 with 2 elements, compute the rank of B as an element
of M2(F2).
(c) Let
1
C
-1 1
[4]
[6]
and consider C as an element of M3(Q). Determine the minimal polynomial
mc(x) and hence, or otherwise, show that C can not be diagonalised.
[7]
(d) Show that C in (c) considered as an element of M3(R) can be diagonalised. Write
down all the eigenvalues. Show your working.
[8]
16. Solve the given differential equation:
y" + 4y sin (t)u(t 2π),
-
y(0) = 1, y'(0) = 0
Given,
1
(x² + 1)(x²+4)
1/3
-1/3
=
+
x²+1 x² +4
Send your answer in
pen and paper don't r
eputed ur self down
Don't send the same
previous answer that
was Al generated
Don't use any Al tool
show ur answer in pe
n and paper then take
Chapter 1 Solutions
Contemporary Mathematics For Business & Consumers, Brief Edition, Loose-leaf Version
Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1.I - Write the following whole numbers in numerical...Ch. 1.I - Write the following whole numbers in numerical...
Ch. 1.I - Write the following whole numbers in numerical...Ch. 1.I - Match the following numbers in word form with the...Ch. 1.I - Match the following numbers in word form with the...Ch. 1.I - Match the following numbers in word form with the...Ch. 1.I - Match the following numbers in word form with the...Ch. 1.I - Match the following numbers in word form with the...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Prob. 20RECh. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1.I - 23. According to the American Wind Energy...Ch. 1.I - According to the Financial Times, in a recent...Ch. 1.II - Add the following sets of whole numbers and verify...Ch. 1.II - Prob. 4TIECh. 1.II - Prob. 1RECh. 1.II - Prob. 2RECh. 1.II - Prob. 3RECh. 1.II - Prob. 4RECh. 1.II - Prob. 5RECh. 1.II - 2,339+118+3,650+8,770+81+6=Ch. 1.II - Prob. 7RECh. 1.II - Prob. 8RECh. 1.II - Prob. 9RECh. 1.II - Estimate the following by rounding each number all...Ch. 1.II - Prob. 11RECh. 1.II - Prob. 12RECh. 1.II - Prob. 13RECh. 1.II - At Cherry Valley Farms, a farmer plants 350 acres...Ch. 1.II - Prob. 15RECh. 1.II - Prob. 16RECh. 1.II - Prob. 17RECh. 1.II - Prob. 18RECh. 1.II - Prob. 19RECh. 1.II - Prob. 20RECh. 1.II - Prob. 21RECh. 1.II - Prob. 22RECh. 1.II - Prob. 23RECh. 1.II - Subtract the following numbers.
24. Subtract 5,868...Ch. 1.II - Subtract the following numbers.
25. Subtract...Ch. 1.II - The beginning inventory of the Designer Shoe Salon...Ch. 1.II - Prob. 27RECh. 1.II - 28. Use the U.S Postal Service Mail Volume graph...Ch. 1.II - Prob. 29RECh. 1.II - An Allied Vans Lines moving truck picks up loads...Ch. 1.II - A personal balance sheet is the financial picture...Ch. 1.III - Multiply the following numbers and verify your...Ch. 1.III - Divide the following numbers and verify your...Ch. 1.III - Prob. 1RECh. 1.III - Multiply the following numbers and verify your...Ch. 1.III - Prob. 3RECh. 1.III - Prob. 4RECh. 1.III - Prob. 5RECh. 1.III - Prob. 6RECh. 1.III - Prob. 7RECh. 1.III - Prob. 8RECh. 1.III - Prob. 9RECh. 1.III - Prob. 10RECh. 1.III - Prob. 11RECh. 1.III - Dazzling Designs made custom drapery for a client...Ch. 1.III - Prob. 13RECh. 1.III - There are 34 stairs from bottom to top in each of...Ch. 1.III - Prob. 15RECh. 1.III - 16. Bob Powers, a consulting electrical engineer,...Ch. 1.III - Prob. 17RECh. 1.III - Prob. 18RECh. 1.III - Prob. 19RECh. 1.III - Prob. 20RECh. 1.III - Prob. 21RECh. 1.III - Prob. 22RECh. 1.III - Prob. 23RECh. 1.III - Tip-Top Roofing has 50,640 square feet of roofing...Ch. 1.III - 25. A calculator uses eight circuit boards, each...Ch. 1.III - 26. Eric Shotwell borrows $24,600 from the...Ch. 1.III - A 16-person college basketball team is going to a...Ch. 1.III - You have just purchased a 65-acre ranch for a...Ch. 1.III - As the IT manager for FastNet Enterprises, you...Ch. 1.III - 30. You are the owner of Decorama Flooring. Todd...Ch. 1 - 1. The number system most widely used in the world...Ch. 1 - Prob. 2CRCh. 1 - Prob. 3CRCh. 1 - Prob. 4CRCh. 1 - Prob. 5CRCh. 1 - Rounding all the way is a process of rounding...Ch. 1 - Prob. 7CRCh. 1 - 8. When performing addition, we write the addends...Ch. 1 - 9. The mathematical process of taking away, or...Ch. 1 - Prob. 10CRCh. 1 - Prob. 11CRCh. 1 - Prob. 12CRCh. 1 - Prob. 13CRCh. 1 - 14. Show four ways to express 15 divided by 5....Ch. 1 - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1 - Read and write the following whole numbers in...Ch. 1 - Prob. 3ATCh. 1 - Prob. 4ATCh. 1 - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1 - Round the following numbers to the indicated...Ch. 1 - Prob. 7ATCh. 1 - Prob. 8ATCh. 1 - Prob. 9ATCh. 1 - Prob. 10ATCh. 1 - Prob. 11ATCh. 1 - Prob. 12ATCh. 1 - Prob. 13ATCh. 1 - Prob. 14ATCh. 1 - Prob. 15ATCh. 1 - The following chart shows the number of meals...Ch. 1 - Prob. 17ATCh. 1 - 18. The stadium parking lot at Fairview College...Ch. 1 - Prob. 19ATCh. 1 - Facebook reported that for one three-month period,...Ch. 1 - You are in charge of organizing the annual...Ch. 1 - Prob. 22ATCh. 1 - Prob. 23ATCh. 1 - A banana nut bread recipe calls for 2 cups of...Ch. 1 - Brian Hickman bought 2,000 shares of stock at $62...Ch. 1 - 26. The Canmore Mining Company produces 40 tons of...Ch. 1 - Prob. 27ATCh. 1 - The Iberia Corporation purchased a new warehouse...Ch. 1 - A flatbed railroad car weighs 150 tons empty and...Ch. 1 - The Spring Creek Police Department has been asked...Ch. 1 - Prob. 31ATCh. 1 - John Rock has narrowed down his selection of a new...Ch. 1 - Prob. 33AT
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, subject and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- R denotes the field of real numbers, Q denotes the field of rationals, and Fp denotes the field of p elements given by integers modulo p. You may refer to general results from lectures. Question 1 For each non-negative integer m, let R[x]m denote the vector space consisting of the polynomials in x with coefficients in R and of degree ≤ m. x²+2, V3 = 5. Prove that (V1, V2, V3) is a linearly independent (a) Let vi = x, V2 = list in R[x] 3. (b) Let V1, V2, V3 be as defined in (a). Find a vector v € R[×]3 such that (V1, V2, V3, V4) is a basis of R[x] 3. [8] [6] (c) Prove that the map ƒ from R[x] 2 to R[x]3 given by f(p(x)) = xp(x) — xp(0) is a linear map. [6] (d) Write down the matrix for the map ƒ defined in (c) with respect to the basis (2,2x + 1, x²) of R[x] 2 and the basis (1, x, x², x³) of R[x] 3. [5]arrow_forwardQuestion 4 (a) The following matrices represent linear maps on R² with respect to an orthonormal basis: = [1/√5 2/√5 [2/√5 -1/√5] " [1/√5 2/√5] A = B = [2/√5 1/√5] 1 C = D = = = [ 1/3/5 2/35] 1/√5 2/√5 -2/√5 1/√5' For each of the matrices A, B, C, D, state whether it represents a self-adjoint linear map, an orthogonal linear map, both, or neither. (b) For the quadratic form q(x, y, z) = y² + 2xy +2yz over R, write down a linear change of variables to u, v, w such that q in these terms is in canonical form for Sylvester's Law of Inertia. [6] [4]arrow_forwardpart b pleasearrow_forward
- Question 5 (a) Let a, b, c, d, e, ƒ Є K where K is a field. Suppose that the determinant of the matrix a cl |df equals 3 and the determinant of determinant of the matrix a+3b cl d+3e f ГЪ e [ c ] equals 2. Compute the [5] (b) Calculate the adjugate Adj (A) of the 2 × 2 matrix [1 2 A = over R. (c) Working over the field F3 with 3 elements, use row and column operations to put the matrix [6] 0123] A = 3210 into canonical form for equivalence and write down the canonical form. What is the rank of A as a matrix over F3? 4arrow_forwardQuestion 2 In this question, V = Q4 and - U = {(x, y, z, w) EV | x+y2w+ z = 0}, W = {(x, y, z, w) € V | x − 2y + w − z = 0}, Z = {(x, y, z, w) € V | xyzw = 0}. (a) Determine which of U, W, Z are subspaces of V. Justify your answers. (b) Show that UW is a subspace of V and determine its dimension. (c) Is VU+W? Is V = UW? Justify your answers. [10] [7] '00'arrow_forwardGood explanation it sure experts solve itarrow_forward
- Best explains it not need guidelines okkarrow_forwardTask number: A1.1, A1.7 Topic: Celestial Navigation, Compass - Magnetic and Gyro Activ Determine compass error (magnetic and gyro) using azimuth choosing a suitable celestial body (Sun/ Stars/ Planets/ Moon). Apply variation to find the deviation of the magnetic compass. Minimum number of times that activity should be recorded: 6 (2 each phase) Sample calculation (Azimuth- Planets): On 06th May 2006 at 22h20m 10s UTC, a vessel in position 48°00'N 050°00'E observed Mars bearing 327° by compass. Find the compass error. If variation was 4.0° East, calculate the deviation. GHA Mars (06d 22h): Increment (20m 10s): 089° 55.7' 005° 02.5' v (0.9): (+) 00.3' GHA Mars: 094° 58.5' Longitude (E): (+) 050° 00.0' (plus- since longitude is easterly) LHA Mars: 144° 58.5' Declination (06d 22h): d (0.2): N 024° 18.6' (-) 00.1' Declination Mars: N 024° 18.5' P=144° 58.5' (If LHA<180°, P=LHA) A Tan Latitude/ Tan P A Tan 48° 00' Tan 144° 58.5' A = 1.584646985 N (A is named opposite to latitude, except when…arrow_forwardTask number: A1.1, A1.7 Topic: Celestial Navigation, Compass - Magnetic and Gyro Activ Determine compass error (magnetic and gyro) using azimuth choosing a suitable celestial body (Sun/ Stars/ Planets/ Moon). Apply variation to find the deviation of the magnetic compass. Minimum number of times that activity should be recorded: 6 (2 each phase) Sample calculation (Azimuth- Planets): On 06th May 2006 at 22h20m 10s UTC, a vessel in position 48°00'N 050°00'E observed Mars bearing 327° by compass. Find the compass error. If variation was 4.0° East, calculate the deviation. GHA Mars (06d 22h): Increment (20m 10s): 089° 55.7' 005° 02.5' v (0.9): (+) 00.3' GHA Mars: 094° 58.5' Longitude (E): (+) 050° 00.0' (plus- since longitude is easterly) LHA Mars: 144° 58.5' Declination (06d 22h): d (0.2): N 024° 18.6' (-) 00.1' Declination Mars: N 024° 18.5' P=144° 58.5' (If LHA<180°, P=LHA) A Tan Latitude/ Tan P A Tan 48° 00' Tan 144° 58.5' A = 1.584646985 N (A is named opposite to latitude, except when…arrow_forward
- Activ Determine compass error using amplitude (Sun). Minimum number of times that activity should be performed: 3 (1 each phase) Sample calculation (Amplitude- Sun): On 07th May 2006 at Sunset, a vessel in position 10°00'N 010°00'W observed the Sun bearing 288° by compass. Find the compass error. LMT Sunset: LIT: (+) 00d 07d 18h 00h 13m 40m UTC Sunset: 07d 18h 53m (added- since longitude is westerly) Declination (07d 18h): N 016° 55.5' d (0.7): (+) 00.6' Declination Sun: N 016° 56.1' Sin Amplitude = Sin Declination/Cos Latitude = Sin 016°56.1'/ Cos 10°00' = 0.295780189 Amplitude=W17.2N (The prefix of amplitude is named easterly if body is rising, and westerly if body is setting. The suffix is named same as declination) True Bearing=287.2° Compass Bearing= 288.0° Compass Error = 0.8° Westarrow_forwardOnly sure experts solve it correct complete solutions okkarrow_forward4c Consider the function f(x) = 10x + 4x5 - 4x³- 1. Enter the general antiderivative of f(x)arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Algebra: Structure And Method, Book 1AlgebraISBN:9780395977224Author:Richard G. Brown, Mary P. Dolciani, Robert H. Sorgenfrey, William L. ColePublisher:McDougal LittellElementary AlgebraAlgebraISBN:9780998625713Author:Lynn Marecek, MaryAnne Anthony-SmithPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityHolt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
- Mathematics For Machine TechnologyAdvanced MathISBN:9781337798310Author:Peterson, John.Publisher:Cengage Learning,
Algebra: Structure And Method, Book 1
Algebra
ISBN:9780395977224
Author:Richard G. Brown, Mary P. Dolciani, Robert H. Sorgenfrey, William L. Cole
Publisher:McDougal Littell
Elementary Algebra
Algebra
ISBN:9780998625713
Author:Lynn Marecek, MaryAnne Anthony-Smith
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...
Algebra
ISBN:9780547587776
Author:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Publisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Mathematics For Machine Technology
Advanced Math
ISBN:9781337798310
Author:Peterson, John.
Publisher:Cengage Learning,
Introduction to Integers,Maths - What are integers - English; Author: Mathispower4u;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04pURxo-iu0;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Integers-Middle School Math; Author: MooMooMath and Science;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGWcWtqM_yk;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY