Four partners (Adams, Benson, Cagle, and Duncan) jointly own a piece of land with a market value of $400,000. Suppose that the land is subdivided into four parcels s 1 , s 2 , s 3 , and s 4 . The partners are planning to split up, with each partner getting one of the four parcels. a. To Adams, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 , s 2 and s 3 are equal in value, and s 4 is worth $20,000 more than s 1 . Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Adams. b. To Benson, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 , s 4 is worth $8,000 more than s 3 , and together s 4 and s 3 have a combined value equal to 40% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Benson. c. To Cagle, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 and $20,000 more than s 4 , and s 3 is worth twice as much as s 4 . Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Cagle. d. To Duncan, s 1 is worth $4,000 more than s 2 ; s 2 and s 3 have equal value; and s 1 , s 2 , and s 3 have a combined value equal to 70% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Duncan. e. Find a fair division of the land using the parcels s 1 , s 2 , s 3 , and s 4 as fair shares.
Four partners (Adams, Benson, Cagle, and Duncan) jointly own a piece of land with a market value of $400,000. Suppose that the land is subdivided into four parcels s 1 , s 2 , s 3 , and s 4 . The partners are planning to split up, with each partner getting one of the four parcels. a. To Adams, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 , s 2 and s 3 are equal in value, and s 4 is worth $20,000 more than s 1 . Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Adams. b. To Benson, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 , s 4 is worth $8,000 more than s 3 , and together s 4 and s 3 have a combined value equal to 40% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Benson. c. To Cagle, s 1 is worth $40,000 more than s 2 and $20,000 more than s 4 , and s 3 is worth twice as much as s 4 . Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Cagle. d. To Duncan, s 1 is worth $4,000 more than s 2 ; s 2 and s 3 have equal value; and s 1 , s 2 , and s 3 have a combined value equal to 70% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Duncan. e. Find a fair division of the land using the parcels s 1 , s 2 , s 3 , and s 4 as fair shares.
Four partners (Adams, Benson, Cagle, and Duncan) jointly own a piece of land with a market value of $400,000. Suppose that the land is subdivided into four parcels
s
1
,
s
2
,
s
3
, and
s
4
. The partners are planning to split up, with each partner getting one of the four parcels.
a. To Adams,
s
1
is worth $40,000 more than
s
2
,
s
2
and
s
3
are equal in value, and
s
4
is worth $20,000 more than
s
1
. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Adams.
b. To Benson,
s
1
is worth $40,000 more than
s
2
,
s
4
is worth $8,000 more than
s
3
, and together
s
4
and
s
3
have a combined value equal to 40% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Benson.
c. To Cagle,
s
1
is worth $40,000 more than
s
2
and $20,000 more than
s
4
, and
s
3
is worth twice as much as
s
4
. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Cagle.
d. To Duncan,
s
1
is worth $4,000 more than
s
2
;
s
2
and
s
3
have equal value; and
s
1
,
s
2
, and
s
3
have a combined value equal to 70% of the value of the land. Determine which of the four parcels are fair shares to Duncan.
e. Find a fair division of the land using the parcels
s
1
,
s
2
,
s
3
, and
s
4
as fair shares.
3. Let
sin (22) + cos (T2)
f(z) =
z(22 + 1)(z+1)
Compute f(z)dz over each of the contours/closed curves C1, C2, C3 and C4 shown
below.
L
10
-C
x
Don't use any Al tool
show ur answer
pe
n and paper then take
what is the slope of the linear equation-5x+2y-10=0
1. Evaluate
(2,5)
(3x+y)dx+(2y-x)dy
(0,1)
(i) along the straight lines from (0, 1) to (2, 1) and then from (2, 1) to (2,5), and (ii)
along the parabola y = x² + 1.
Don't use any Al tool
show ur answer in pe
n and paper then take
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.
Linear Equation | Solving Linear Equations | What is Linear Equation in one variable ?; Author: Najam Academy;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHm3X_Ta_iE;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY