Suppose that David is the divider and Paula is the chooser. a . Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( b ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David. b. Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( c ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David. c . Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( d ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David.
Suppose that David is the divider and Paula is the chooser. a . Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( b ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David. b. Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( c ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David. c . Is the cut shown in Fig . 3 − 21 ( d ) _ a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David.
Solution Summary: The author explains how David and Paula are planning to divide the chocolate-vanilla-strawberry cake using the divider-chooser method.
Suppose that David is the divider and Paula is the chooser.
a. Is the cut shown in
Fig
.
3
−
21
(
b
)
_
a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David.
b. Is the cut shown in
Fig
.
3
−
21
(
c
)
_
a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David.
c. Is the cut shown in
Fig
.
3
−
21
(
d
)
_
a possible 50-50 cut that David might have made as the divider? If so, describe the share Paula should choose and give the value (as a percent) of that share to Paula. If the cut is not a 50-50 cut, give the values of the two shares to David.
موضوع الدرس
Prove that
Determine the following groups
Homz(QZ) Hom = (Q13,Z)
Homz(Q), Hom/z/nZ, Qt
for neN-
(2) Every factor group of
adivisible group is divisble.
• If R is a Skew ficald (aring with
identity and each non Zero element is
invertible then every R-module is free.
A: Tan Latitude / Tan P
A = Tan 04° 30'/ Tan 77° 50.3'
A= 0.016960 803 S CA named opposite to latitude,
except when hour angle between 090° and 270°)
B: Tan Declination | Sin P
B Tan 052° 42.1'/ Sin 77° 50.3'
B = 1.34 2905601 SCB is alway named same as
declination)
C = A + B = 1.35 9866404 S CC correction, A+/- B:
if A and B have same name - add, If
different name- subtract)
=
Tan Azimuth 1/Ccx cos Latitude)
Tan Azimuth = 0.737640253
Azimuth
=
S 36.4° E CAzimuth takes combined
name of C correction and Hour Angle - If LHA
is between 0° and 180°, it is named "west", if
LHA is between 180° and 360° it is named "east"
True Azimuth= 143.6°
Compass Azimuth = 145.0°
Compass Error = 1.4° West
Variation 4.0 East
Deviation: 5.4 West
A: Tan Latitude / Tan P
A = Tan 04° 30'/ Tan 77° 50.3'
A= 0.016960 803 S CA named opposite to latitude,
except when hour angle between 090° and 270°)
B: Tan Declination | Sin P
B Tan 052° 42.1'/ Sin 77° 50.3'
B = 1.34 2905601 SCB is alway named same as
declination)
C = A + B = 1.35 9866404 S CC correction, A+/- B:
if A and B have same name - add, If
different name- subtract)
=
Tan Azimuth 1/Ccx cos Latitude)
Tan Azimuth = 0.737640253
Azimuth
=
S 36.4° E CAzimuth takes combined
name of C correction and Hour Angle - If LHA
is between 0° and 180°, it is named "west", if
LHA is between 180° and 360° it is named "east"
True Azimuth= 143.6°
Compass Azimuth = 145.0°
Compass Error = 1.4° West
Variation 4.0 East
Deviation: 5.4 West
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.
Discrete Distributions: Binomial, Poisson and Hypergeometric | Statistics for Data Science; Author: Dr. Bharatendra Rai;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHhyy4JMigg;License: Standard Youtube License