Find the apportionment under Adams’s method of the Inter-Fraternia Congress described in Exercise 9. (Hint: Express the modified divisors in terms of percents of the total population and look for suitable divisors in the interval 0.5% to 0.51%.) 9. The Interplanetary Federation of Fraternia consists of six planets: Alpha, Kappa, Beta Theta, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Epsilon Tau, and Phi Sigma ( A , B , C , D , E , and F for short ) The federation is governed by the Inter-Fraternia Congress, consisting of 200 seats apportioned among the planets according to the population. Table 4-27 gives the planet populations as percentages of the total population of Fraternia. Table 4-27 Planet A B C D E F Population Percentage 11.37 8.07 38.62 14.98 10.42 16.54
Find the apportionment under Adams’s method of the Inter-Fraternia Congress described in Exercise 9. (Hint: Express the modified divisors in terms of percents of the total population and look for suitable divisors in the interval 0.5% to 0.51%.) 9. The Interplanetary Federation of Fraternia consists of six planets: Alpha, Kappa, Beta Theta, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Epsilon Tau, and Phi Sigma ( A , B , C , D , E , and F for short ) The federation is governed by the Inter-Fraternia Congress, consisting of 200 seats apportioned among the planets according to the population. Table 4-27 gives the planet populations as percentages of the total population of Fraternia. Table 4-27 Planet A B C D E F Population Percentage 11.37 8.07 38.62 14.98 10.42 16.54
Find the apportionment under Adams’s method of the Inter-Fraternia Congress described in Exercise 9.(Hint: Express the modified divisors in terms of percents of the total population and look for suitable divisors in the interval 0.5% to 0.51%.)
9. The Interplanetary Federation of Fraternia consists of six planets: Alpha, Kappa, Beta Theta, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Epsilon Tau, and Phi Sigma
(
A
,
B
,
C
,
D
,
E
,
and
F
for short
)
The federation is governed by the Inter-Fraternia Congress, consisting of 200 seats apportioned among the planets according to the population. Table 4-27 gives the planet populations as percentages of the total population of Fraternia.
Instructions.
"I have written solutions in text form, but I need experts to rewrite them in handwriting from A to Z, exactly as I have written, without any changes."
Both in images okk. Instructions.
"I have written solutions in text form, but I need experts to rewrite them in handwriting from A to Z, exactly as I have written, without any changes."
Question 1:
If a barometer were built using oil (p = 0.92 g/cm³) instead of mercury (p =
13.6 g/cm³), would the column of oil be higher than, lower than, or the same as the
column of mercury at 1.00 atm? If the level is different, by what factor? Explain. (5 pts)
Solution:
A barometer works based on the principle that the pressure exerted by the liquid column
balances atmospheric pressure. The pressure is given by:
P = pgh
Since the atmospheric pressure remains constant (P = 1.00 atm), the height of the
liquid column is inversely proportional to its density:
Step 1: Given Data
PHg
hol=hgx
Poil
• Density of mercury: PHg = 13.6 g/cm³
Density of oil: Poil = 0.92 g/cm³
• Standard height of mercury at 1.00 atm: hμg
Step 2: Compute Height of Oil
= 760 mm = 0.760 m
13.6
hoil
= 0.760 x
0.92
hoil
= 0.760 × 14.78
hoil
= 11.23 m
Step 3: Compare Heights
Since oil is less dense than mercury, the column of oil must be much taller than that of
mercury. The factor by which it is taller is:
Final…
Elementary Algebra For College Students (10th Edition)
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.
Hypothesis Testing - Solving Problems With Proportions; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76VruarGn2Q;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Hypothesis Testing and Confidence Intervals (FRM Part 1 – Book 2 – Chapter 5); Author: Analystprep;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vth3yZIUlGQ;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY