url string | fetch_time int64 | content_mime_type string | warc_filename string | warc_record_offset int32 | warc_record_length int32 | text string | token_count int32 | char_count int32 | metadata string | score float64 | int_score int64 | crawl string | snapshot_type string | language string | language_score float64 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
https://jeopardylabs.com/print/addition-893 | 1,597,351,733,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-34/segments/1596439739073.12/warc/CC-MAIN-20200813191256-20200813221256-00543.warc.gz | 300,816,700 | 3,647 | Place Value
Number Line
Draw a Picture
Word Problems
Vocabulary
100
342+245=
587
100
41+31=
72
100
583+216=
799
100
Caleb had 37 lollipops. Kylie has 21 lollipops. How many lollipops do they have in all?
58
100
What is the name of the digits you add together?
200
36+52=
88
200
451+312=
763
200
412+... | 399 | 1,305 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.5625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2020-34 | latest | en | 0.927025 |
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/593906/strength-of-wall-regarding-a-system-of-hanging-mass | 1,611,172,717,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-04/segments/1610703521987.71/warc/CC-MAIN-20210120182259-20210120212259-00099.warc.gz | 510,785,610 | 33,633 | # Strength of wall regarding a system of hanging mass
When we assume that mass m is directly at the center of L, and $$\alpha$$ is the angle between the rope and the horizontal, I am able to show that for equilibrium, $$\sin{\alpha}=\frac{m}{2M}$$ There is also a resultant reaction force from the roller due to the res... | 673 | 2,597 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.765625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-04 | latest | en | 0.944538 |
https://educationexpert.net/mathematics/1687956.html | 1,620,676,361,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-21/segments/1620243991759.1/warc/CC-MAIN-20210510174005-20210510204005-00154.warc.gz | 250,833,424 | 7,218 | 26 February, 04:57
# You are choosing between two health clubs. Club A offers membership for a fee of \$ 28\$28 plus a monthly fee of \$ 20.\$20. Club B offers membership for a fee of \$ 19\$19 plus a monthly fee of \$ 23.\$23. After how many months will the total cost of each health club be the same? What will be the... | 361 | 1,201 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.625 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2021-21 | latest | en | 0.923731 |
http://astro.uchicago.edu/cara/outreach/resources/chi93/fall/energy/mech.html | 1,539,684,266,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-43/segments/1539583510749.37/warc/CC-MAIN-20181016093012-20181016114512-00276.warc.gz | 29,870,725 | 3,019 | # Labs from Chicago, Fall 1993 : Mechanical Potential Energy.
Dr. Rich Kron, Dr. Heidi Newberg, and Luisa Rebull
Labs written for the CARA Space Explorers, Fall 1993
This is meant to be handed out to the students.
## I. Introduction
Remember jumping on the bed when you were little? When you land on the bed, somethi... | 1,202 | 5,428 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.03125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-43 | latest | en | 0.948889 |
https://nrich.maths.org/public/leg.php?code=170&cl=3&cldcmpid=276 | 1,474,849,477,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-40/segments/1474738660467.49/warc/CC-MAIN-20160924173740-00169-ip-10-143-35-109.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 870,563,299 | 6,566 | # Search by Topic
#### Resources tagged with Perimeters similar to Pericut:
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### There are 16 results
Broad Topics > Measures and Mensuration > Perimeters
### Pericut
##### Stage: 4 and 5 Challenge Level:
Two semicircle sit on the diameter of a semicircle centre O ... | 821 | 3,580 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.34375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-40 | longest | en | 0.876382 |
http://standardstoolkit.k12.hi.us/common-core/mathematics/mathematics-grade-8-common-core-standards/ | 1,545,144,772,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-51/segments/1544376829429.94/warc/CC-MAIN-20181218143757-20181218165757-00457.warc.gz | 263,079,916 | 16,408 | # Mathematics Grade 8 Common Core Standards
### Get the PDF
In Grade 8, instructional time should focus on three critical areas: (1) formulating and reasoning about expressions and equations, including modeling an association in bivariate data with a linear equation, and solving linear equations and systems of linear... | 2,644 | 13,125 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.4375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-51 | longest | en | 0.925065 |
http://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/Maple/view.aspx?path=Statistics/Percentile | 1,462,265,139,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-18/segments/1461860121090.75/warc/CC-MAIN-20160428161521-00028-ip-10-239-7-51.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 668,987,546 | 27,493 | Statistics - Maple Help
Home : Support : Online Help : Statistics and Data Analysis : Statistics Package : Quantities : Statistics/Percentile
Statistics
Percentile
compute percentiles
Calling Sequence Percentile(A, p, ds_options) Percentile(X, p, rv_options)
Parameters
A - X - algebraic; random variable or di... | 1,025 | 3,371 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 22, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.9375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-18 | longest | en | 0.357124 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/calculating-components-of-a-third-quadrant-vector.1055410/ | 1,718,747,847,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-26/segments/1718198861794.76/warc/CC-MAIN-20240618203026-20240618233026-00128.warc.gz | 820,303,924 | 15,915 | # Calculating components of a third-quadrant vector
• Joe_mama69
Joe_mama69
Homework Statement
I am not sure if I did this right as it wasn't as complicated as I think the solution should be and I couldn't find anything online as to how the solution is even supposed to look like. I inserted an imgur link of my answer ... | 902 | 2,778 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.1875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-26 | latest | en | 0.874933 |
https://zh.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E8%89%B2%E6%95%A3%E9%95%BF%E6%B3%A2%E6%96%B9%E7%A8%8B%E7%BB%84 | 1,575,591,546,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-51/segments/1575540482954.0/warc/CC-MAIN-20191206000309-20191206024309-00275.warc.gz | 944,451,474 | 11,585 | # 色散长波方程组
${\displaystyle u_{xt}+v_{xx}+0.5*(u^{2})_{xy}=0}$
${\displaystyle v_{t}+(u*v+u_{xy})_{x}=0}$
## 解析解
${\displaystyle {u(x,y,t)=-1.*_{C}5/_{C}3-2.*_{C}3*sec(_{C}2+_{C}3*x+_{C}4*y+_{C}5*t),v(x,t)=_{C}4*_{C}3-2.*_{C}4*_{C}3*sec(_{C}2+_{C}3*x+_{C}4*y+_{C}5*t)^{2}}}$
${\displaystyle {u(x,y,t)=-1.*_{C}5/_{C}3+2... | 1,699 | 2,978 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 10, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-51 | latest | en | 0.206839 |
https://klu.ai/glossary/first-order-logic | 1,716,975,496,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-22/segments/1715971059221.97/warc/CC-MAIN-20240529072748-20240529102748-00786.warc.gz | 290,028,965 | 17,949 | # What is first-order logic?
by Stephen M. Walker II, Co-Founder / CEO
## What is first-order logic?
First-order logic (FOL), also known as first-order predicate calculus or quantificational logic, is a system of formal logic that provides a way to formalize natural languages into a computable format. It is an exten... | 1,905 | 9,726 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.5625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-22 | latest | en | 0.935253 |
https://holooly.com/solutions-v2-1/if-tree-is-as-shown-below-what-is-the-tie-set-for-this-tree/ | 1,679,474,323,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-14/segments/1679296943809.22/warc/CC-MAIN-20230322082826-20230322112826-00341.warc.gz | 355,493,829 | 18,397 | ## Q. 1.P.34
If tree is as shown below, what is the tie set for this tree?
## Verified Solution
The tie set is
$\begin{array}{ll} j_3=i_1 & j_6=i_3 \\ j_4=i_2 & j_8=i_4 \\ j_1=i_2+i_4 & j_5=i_1-i_2-i_3-i_4 \\ j_2=i_1-i_3 & j_7=i_2-i_1 \end{array}$ | 120 | 251 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-14 | latest | en | 0.58474 |
https://www.cuemath.com/jee/introduction-to-limits-limits-continuity-differentiability/ | 1,601,285,345,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-40/segments/1600401598891.71/warc/CC-MAIN-20200928073028-20200928103028-00454.warc.gz | 773,087,916 | 22,067 | # Introduction To Limits
Go back to 'LCD'
The concept of limits forms the basis of calculus and is a very powerful one. Both differential and integral calculus are based on this concept and as such, limits need to be studied in good detail.
This section contains a general, intuitive introduction to limits.
Conside... | 1,277 | 4,454 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.78125 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2020-40 | longest | en | 0.886184 |
http://nrich.maths.org/public/leg.php?code=-99&cl=3&cldcmpid=5341 | 1,495,722,274,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-22/segments/1495463608084.63/warc/CC-MAIN-20170525140724-20170525160724-00451.warc.gz | 262,299,495 | 10,200 | # Search by Topic
#### Resources tagged with Working systematically similar to Oranges and Lemons, Say the Bells of St Clement's:
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Broad Topics > Using, Applying and Reasoning about Mathematics > Working systematically
### Oranges and Lemons... | 2,193 | 9,477 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-22 | longest | en | 0.899348 |
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/NEW-5th-Grade-Math-Spiral-Choice-Boards-Set-2-Over-60-Questions-2503226 | 1,516,613,381,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-05/segments/1516084891196.79/warc/CC-MAIN-20180122073932-20180122093932-00579.warc.gz | 962,775,900 | 18,515 | Total:
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# NEW 5th Grade Math Spiral Choice Boards Set 2: Over 60 Questions!
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Looking for differentiated homework? A continued review/spiral activity during centers? Review for STAAR?... | 963 | 3,639 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.671875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-05 | latest | en | 0.916677 |
http://glastonburydrums.com/correlation-and-pearsons-r/ | 1,716,193,873,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-22/segments/1715971058254.21/warc/CC-MAIN-20240520080523-20240520110523-00110.warc.gz | 13,293,490 | 13,118 | # Correlation And Pearson’s R
Now here is an interesting thought for your next scientific discipline class matter: Can you use graphs to test regardless of whether a positive geradlinig relationship genuinely exists among variables X and Con? You may be pondering, well, it could be not… But what I’m saying is that you... | 764 | 3,785 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.03125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-22 | longest | en | 0.911262 |
https://books.google.com/books?id=1WwMRAAACAAJ&source=gbs_book_other_versions_r&hl=en | 1,448,889,559,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2015-48/segments/1448398461529.84/warc/CC-MAIN-20151124205421-00088-ip-10-71-132-137.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 823,823,302 | 10,198 | # A Course in Mathematical Analysis (Volume: 1)
General Books LLC, 2010 - Mathematics - 290 pages
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1904 Excerpt: ...toward the o... | 535 | 2,174 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.5 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2015-48 | longest | en | 0.921117 |
https://math.answers.com/calculus/2x_plus_3y_equal_40_-2x_plus_2y_equal_20 | 1,653,735,503,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652663016373.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20220528093113-20220528123113-00091.warc.gz | 439,512,606 | 40,295 | 0
# 2x plus 3y equal 40 -2x plus 2y equal 20?
Wiki User
2009-10-16 02:48:20
2x+3y=40-2x+2y=20
Since 2x does not contain the variable to solve for, move it to the right-hand side of the equation by subtracting 2x from both sides.
3y=-2x
Divide each term in the equation by 3.
(3y)/(3)=-(2x)/(3)
Simplify the left-h... | 196 | 526 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.0625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-21 | latest | en | 0.875477 |
http://www.slideserve.com/Mia_John/repeated-measures-and-two-factor-anova | 1,503,172,434,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-34/segments/1502886105712.28/warc/CC-MAIN-20170819182059-20170819202059-00575.warc.gz | 673,970,189 | 14,262 | 1 / 15
# repeated measures and two-factor anova - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Repeated measures and two-factor ANOVA. Chapter 14. Two extensions of ANOVA. Repeated measures: comparable to paired samples t-test Used with within-subjects design Factorial ANOVA: used when there is more than one predictor variable. Repea... | 856 | 3,785 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.546875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-34 | longest | en | 0.911912 |
http://burtleburtle.net/bob/crypto/kfk.html | 1,516,715,124,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-05/segments/1516084891976.74/warc/CC-MAIN-20180123131643-20180123151643-00330.warc.gz | 53,285,986 | 2,931 | I don't know the real answer here. I'm trying to figure it out.
What is the fastest way to turn a pseudorandom permutation into a block cipher? If f(*) is a pseudorandom permutation mapping an n-bit string into an n-bit string, and k0 and k1 are secret n-bit keys, then k0 XOR f(k1 XOR *) is a block cipher with an effe... | 1,311 | 4,385 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.5 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-05 | latest | en | 0.899243 |
http://www.math.cmu.edu/~eschimme/300Book/300-Page-4.html | 1,539,879,178,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-43/segments/1539583511889.43/warc/CC-MAIN-20181018152212-20181018173712-00410.warc.gz | 502,663,925 | 18,450 | Ernest Schimmerling ; Basic and Intermediate Logic ; Chapter 4
# Online textbook for Basic and Intermediate Logic
## Chapter 4 : Model theory
In this chapter, we will develop general tools for comparing and constructing the models of a given theory. These techniques will be applied to some interesting theories.
To ... | 15,431 | 46,616 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.984375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-43 | latest | en | 0.879881 |
https://whatishplc.com/laboratory/lets-understand-what-is-volume/ | 1,709,561,910,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947476452.25/warc/CC-MAIN-20240304133241-20240304163241-00772.warc.gz | 604,326,759 | 58,979 | Let's understand what is volume?
Measurement has become an everyday activity, which involves many things that we always do. Like buying a packaged juice, buying a liter of softener or measuring the ingredients to make a cake to celebrate. It is also very important in laboratories, in masonry, in pharmacy. They all rel... | 1,276 | 5,640 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-10 | latest | en | 0.947849 |
https://yourmomsdonuts.com/draw-disks-in-the-place-value-chart.html | 1,653,098,809,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652662534773.36/warc/CC-MAIN-20220521014358-20220521044358-00225.warc.gz | 1,296,831,404 | 17,127 | May 21, 2022
Draw Disks In The Place Value Chart. Show each step using the standard algorithm. 10 times 2 tens = _____ tens = _____ c.
5 groups of 2 hundredths a. Use <, >, or = to compare the two numbers. This video walkthrough demonstrates how to use a place value chart to solve a division story problem.
### Fill ... | 360 | 1,416 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.796875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-21 | latest | en | 0.769939 |
https://www.nagwa.com/en/worksheets/438157056403/ | 1,550,341,881,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-09/segments/1550247480905.29/warc/CC-MAIN-20190216170210-20190216192210-00358.warc.gz | 916,847,355 | 23,321 | # Worksheet: Proving Trigonometric Identities
Q1:
The lengths of the sides of the right triangle shown in the figure are 3, 4, and 5. Find the areas of the squares on the three sides, and find a relationship between them.
• A area of the square on the hypotenuse (25) sum of the areas of the squares on the legs
• B a... | 299 | 1,078 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.15625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-09 | longest | en | 0.903504 |
http://jabsto.com/Tutorial/topic-102/Microsoft-Office-2007-454.html | 1,553,340,614,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-13/segments/1552912202781.83/warc/CC-MAIN-20190323101107-20190323123107-00543.warc.gz | 106,225,122 | 6,808 | Microsoft Office Tutorials and References
In Depth Information
EX 92
Excel Chapter 2 Formulas, Functions, Formatting, and Web Queries
Arithmetic Operations
Table 2–2 describes multiplication and other valid Excel arithmetic operators.
Table 2–2 Summary of Arithmetic Operators
Arithmetic
Operator
Meaning
Example of
Usag... | 959 | 3,108 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-13 | latest | en | 0.83896 |
http://library.thinkquest.org/27630/cgi-bin/doc.cgi?id=guest&pass=l1jghoagHSw5w&file=apps/diff | 1,386,679,160,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-48/segments/1386164018912/warc/CC-MAIN-20131204133338-00094-ip-10-33-133-15.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 108,042,519 | 2,644 | Math and AI: Finding Derivatives
This program simplifies equations that you type into the textbox located at the top of the applet. It can answer any simple mathematical problems involving basic operations such as +, -, ^, etc. and also solve simple differential problems.
• All input must conform to LISP syntax. Thus... | 583 | 2,368 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.59375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2013-48 | latest | en | 0.905454 |
https://www.answers.com/Q/How_old_will_someone_who_is_1_trillion_seconds_old | 1,611,186,865,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-04/segments/1610703522133.33/warc/CC-MAIN-20210120213234-20210121003234-00512.warc.gz | 678,395,681 | 31,555 | Math and Arithmetic
How old will someone who is 1 trillion seconds old?
Wiki User
They will be 31,709 years old if still alive.
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1 trillion years = 3.1556926 × 1019 seconds.
one trillion seconds ago it was last year. There are about 31,???,??? seconds in a year ... | 1,204 | 4,089 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.71875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-04 | latest | en | 0.770881 |
https://www.ximpledu.com/incenter-of-a-triangle/ | 1,571,700,362,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570987795253.70/warc/CC-MAIN-20191021221245-20191022004745-00065.warc.gz | 1,167,402,108 | 4,643 | # Incenter of a Triangle
How to solve the incenter of a triangle problems: definition, properties, example, and its solution.
## Definition
The incenter of a triangle
is the center of the circle
that inscribes the triangle.
## Properties
So the distances between the incenter
and each side of a triangle
are the sam... | 144 | 557 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.921875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-43 | latest | en | 0.850494 |
http://www.indiashines.in/cbse/ncert-solutions-class-10th-science-chapter-13/ | 1,503,310,857,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-34/segments/1502886108264.79/warc/CC-MAIN-20170821095257-20170821115257-00008.warc.gz | 477,599,718 | 22,278 | You are here
Home > CBSE > NCERT Solutions for Class 10th Science Chapter 13 : Magnetic Effects of Electric Current
# NCERT Solutions for Class 10th Science Chapter 13 : Magnetic Effects of Electric Current
CBSE NCERT Solutions for Class 10th Science Chapter 13 : Magnetic Effects of Electric Current. NCERT Class 10 S... | 3,639 | 16,637 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.890625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-34 | latest | en | 0.899594 |
https://www.webassign.net/features/textbooks/muncasterlinalg1/details.html?toc=1&l=subject | 1,657,080,794,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656104660626.98/warc/CC-MAIN-20220706030209-20220706060209-00100.warc.gz | 1,068,389,212 | 10,036 | # Applied Linear Algebra 1st edition
Access is contingent on use of this textbook in the instructor's classroom.
• Chapter 1: Solving Linear Systems and the Terminology of Vectors and Matrices
• 1.1: Solving Linear Systems, Gaussian elimination, back substitution (4)
• 1.2: Column vectors, addition, scalar multiplica... | 1,447 | 4,644 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.515625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-27 | latest | en | 0.688316 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/929762/probability-of-selecting-at-least-one-from-each-group-probability | 1,723,217,765,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-33/segments/1722640767846.53/warc/CC-MAIN-20240809142005-20240809172005-00063.warc.gz | 298,515,978 | 38,683 | # Probability of selecting at least one from each group probability
A team of 5 managers is to be selected from a group of 10 managers - 5 from company A, 3 from company B, and 2 from company C. In how many ways can this be done if the team must contain at least one manager from each company?
I tried selecting one fr... | 724 | 2,568 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.46875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-33 | latest | en | 0.96787 |
https://unacademy.com/lesson/adding-ingredients/LG7ZXTHI | 1,571,414,179,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986684226.55/warc/CC-MAIN-20191018154409-20191018181909-00070.warc.gz | 750,488,176 | 126,575 | to enroll in courses, follow best educators, interact with the community and track your progress.
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This lesson covers the type of questions in which one ingredient is added in a solution to change its composition. One come to know the milk & water addition type questions.
Abhishek Kumar
Lov... | 736 | 2,318 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.90625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-43 | longest | en | 0.923777 |
http://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/calculus/calculus-10th-edition/chapter-6-differential-equations-6-1-exercises-page-403/23 | 1,481,157,766,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-50/segments/1480698542288.7/warc/CC-MAIN-20161202170902-00479-ip-10-31-129-80.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 489,080,296 | 38,566 | ## Calculus 10th Edition
$xy'-2y=x^{3}ex$ $y=x^{2}e^{x}, y'=x^{2}e^{x}+2e^{x}$ $y'=e^{x}(x^{2}+2x)$ $xy'-2y=x(e^{x}(x^{2}+2x))-2(x^{2}e^{x})$ $x(e^{x}(x^{2}+2x))-2(x^{2}e^{x})$=$x^{3}e^{x}$ | 122 | 190 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.78125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-50 | longest | en | 0.058408 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2878154/number-of-ways-to-find-4-positive-integers-less-than-or-equal-to-25-with-gap | 1,553,509,293,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-13/segments/1552912203865.15/warc/CC-MAIN-20190325092147-20190325114147-00523.warc.gz | 557,238,141 | 32,847 | # Number of ways to find $4$ positive integers less than or equal to $25$ with gap of at least $3$ between those integers
In how many ways you can make an unordered selection of four positive integers each less than or equal $25$ such that every pair of selected integers differ by at least $3$, i.e. for any two such i... | 1,289 | 3,456 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.15625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-13 | latest | en | 0.815553 |
https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20150107013838AAb5WZn | 1,618,680,380,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-17/segments/1618038461619.53/warc/CC-MAIN-20210417162353-20210417192353-00545.warc.gz | 221,496,632 | 30,379 | Anonymous
Anonymous asked in Science & MathematicsPhysics · 6 years ago
# Help me!!! Relativity: Twin Paradox version 2.0!!!?
Bob and Jane are sitting in a high speed spacecraft traveling at a speed of 0.49C towards a stationary observer John who is standing on Earth. At time t0(t=0), they reach the point where john ... | 1,205 | 4,952 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.75 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-17 | latest | en | 0.956573 |
http://mathhelpforum.com/differential-equations/128136-need-help-pde-problem.html | 1,480,749,218,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-50/segments/1480698540909.75/warc/CC-MAIN-20161202170900-00150-ip-10-31-129-80.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 179,946,794 | 10,562 | # Thread: Need help with PDE problem
1. ## Need help with PDE problem
Could anyone help me with this? The question is under the spoiler tag.
Spoiler:
The PDE equation is separable, but the boundary conditions are non-homogeneous and are in partial derivatives.
I can answer if the equations are all homogeneous or i... | 1,172 | 3,768 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 23, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-50 | longest | en | 0.9257 |
http://www.wyzant.com/resources/answers/12347/factorice_completely_80_2_45 | 1,398,019,331,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2014-15/segments/1397609539066.13/warc/CC-MAIN-20140416005219-00026-ip-10-147-4-33.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 780,646,116 | 11,222 | Search 72,272 tutors
0 0
Factorice completely 80^2_45
What are the factor of 80k^2_45
80k^2 - 45
= 5(16k^2 - 9), factoring out the GCF of the two terms, which is 5.
= 5(4k+3)(4k-3), since 16k^2 - 9 can be represented by the difference of two squares (4k)^2 - 3^2
Not sure i'm reading this correctly, but assuming t... | 335 | 963 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2014-15 | latest | en | 0.879858 |
http://www.shmoop.com/basic-geometry/volume-pyramids-cones.html | 1,464,459,152,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-22/segments/1464049278042.87/warc/CC-MAIN-20160524002118-00047-ip-10-185-217-139.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 718,108,521 | 16,265 | # Volume of Pyramids & Cones
The formula for the volume of pyramids and cones tells you how much space is inside each object.
For these two solid shapes, the volume formula is the same: it's one third of the area of the base times the height.
## Volume of Pyramids or Cones = ⅓ Base × height
Why? Here it is in a nut... | 258 | 888 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.1875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-22 | longest | en | 0.90404 |
https://www.netexplanations.com/volume-of-a-cube/ | 1,656,982,158,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656104506762.79/warc/CC-MAIN-20220704232527-20220705022527-00543.warc.gz | 964,449,080 | 16,817 | # Why Volume of a Cube is a3
## Volume of a Cube
• Cube is the three-dimensional object as shown in figure which is special cuboid having length, breadth and height all in equal magnitude. Hence cube has 6 square surfaces, 8 vertices or corners, 12 edges and 4 diagonals as shown in figure.
Cube
### Derivation for S... | 322 | 1,282 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.1875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-27 | latest | en | 0.945881 |
https://mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/186926/how-to-solve-equation-in-integer-numbers | 1,722,838,877,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-33/segments/1722640434051.17/warc/CC-MAIN-20240805052118-20240805082118-00097.warc.gz | 302,614,612 | 44,770 | # How to solve equation in integer numbers
I would like to solve an equation like this $$\frac{\log(2)}{\log(3)}=\frac{n-0.5}{k-0.5}$$ where $$n$$, $$k$$ are positive integers and $$\log$$ is natural logarithm. Of course, I can do only numerical approximation, because $$\log(2)$$ is not a rational number (transcendent... | 2,015 | 6,641 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.90625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-33 | latest | en | 0.887146 |
https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/60826/calculation-qne-and-qnh-with-flight-level-and-qnh-set-lower-higher-than-qne | 1,721,275,078,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-30/segments/1720763514822.16/warc/CC-MAIN-20240718034151-20240718064151-00254.warc.gz | 102,656,694 | 36,881 | # Calculation QNE and QNH, with flight level and QNH set lower (higher) than QNE
Hi Student pilot here.
Lets say Mr pilot is flying at FL75 and QNH is set at 995 hpa, however there is a mountain in the way at 7000', will he below or above the mountain?
If you could visually explain that would be even better.
Since ... | 755 | 2,949 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.28125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-30 | latest | en | 0.967241 |
http://www.wikihow.com/Convert-a-Decimal-to-a-Fraction | 1,472,653,344,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-36/segments/1471982290634.12/warc/CC-MAIN-20160823195810-00268-ip-10-153-172-175.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 769,946,252 | 50,499 | Edit Article
# How to Convert a Decimal to a Fraction
Converting a decimal to a fraction isn't as hard as it looks. If you want to know how to do it, just follow these steps.
### Method 1 If the Decimal Terminates
1. 1
Write down the decimal. If the decimal terminates, then it should end after a one or several poin... | 1,339 | 4,821 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.71875 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2016-36 | longest | en | 0.951922 |
https://api-project-1022638073839.appspot.com/questions/how-do-you-find-the-derivative-of-y-e-sqrt-x | 1,618,121,918,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-17/segments/1618038061562.11/warc/CC-MAIN-20210411055903-20210411085903-00422.warc.gz | 208,111,189 | 5,895 | How do you find the derivative of y= e^sqrt(x) ?
Sep 24, 2014
In this problem we have to use the chain rule.
$y = {e}^{\sqrt{x}} = {e}^{{x}^{\frac{1}{2}}}$, convert the square root to its rational power
Apply the chain rule and begin to simplify
$y ' = {e}^{\sqrt{x}} \cdot \left(\frac{1}{2}\right) {x}^{\frac{1}{2}... | 370 | 854 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 9, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.59375 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2021-17 | latest | en | 0.437354 |
https://www.coursepaper.com/solution-manual/978-0073382395-chapter-4-questions-and-problems-32-33/ | 1,620,774,466,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-21/segments/1620243990419.12/warc/CC-MAIN-20210511214444-20210512004444-00214.warc.gz | 733,685,383 | 10,145 | Type
Quiz
Book Title
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Standard Edition 9th Edition
ISBN 13
978-0073382395
978-0073382395 Chapter 4 Questions and Problems 32-33
April 3, 2019
B-54 SOLUTIONS
This is a negative dividend payout ratio of 66 percent, which is impossible. The growth rate is not
consistent with the other co... | 531 | 2,241 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.96875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-21 | latest | en | 0.889855 |
http://gmatclub.com/forum/help-denesting-nested-radicals-143417.html?fl=similar | 1,477,152,922,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-44/segments/1476988719027.25/warc/CC-MAIN-20161020183839-00134-ip-10-171-6-4.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 97,760,670 | 51,084 | Find all School-related info fast with the new School-Specific MBA Forum
It is currently 22 Oct 2016, 09:15
### GMAT Club Daily Prep
#### Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
C... | 1,062 | 3,377 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.53125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-44 | longest | en | 0.858619 |
https://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/Maple/view.aspx?path=PolynomialTools%2FHomogenize | 1,643,206,678,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320304954.18/warc/CC-MAIN-20220126131707-20220126161707-00167.warc.gz | 906,068,405 | 34,614 | Homogenize - Maple Help
PolynomialTools
Homogenize
homogenize a multivariate polynomial
IsHomogeneous
check if a multivariate polynomial is homogeneous
Calling Sequence Homogenize(f, v) Homogenize(f, v, X) Homogenize(f, v, X, W) IsHomogeneous(f) IsHomogeneous(f, X) IsHomogeneous(f, X, W)
Parameters
f - multi... | 1,622 | 4,241 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 59, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.640625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-05 | latest | en | 0.624769 |
https://www.studypug.com/statistics-help/normal-distribution-and-continuous-random-variable | 1,726,147,042,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-38/segments/1725700651457.35/warc/CC-MAIN-20240912110742-20240912140742-00169.warc.gz | 933,938,022 | 74,133 | # Understanding Continuous Random Variables and Normal Distribution Dive into the world of continuous random variables and normal distribution. Master essential statistical concepts, from probability density functions to real-world applications in various fields.
Now Playing:Normal distribution and continuous random v... | 2,527 | 12,752 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 11, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.59375 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2024-38 | latest | en | 0.911493 |
https://studysoup.com/tsg/11382/calculus-early-transcendentals-1-edition-chapter-3-problem-46re | 1,606,812,996,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-50/segments/1606141672314.55/warc/CC-MAIN-20201201074047-20201201104047-00064.warc.gz | 513,364,534 | 11,333 | ×
×
# Higher-order derivatives ind y, y, and y for the following
ISBN: 9780321570567 2
## Solution for problem 46RE Chapter 3
Calculus: Early Transcendentals | 1st Edition
• Textbook Solutions
• 2901 Step-by-step solutions solved by professors and subject experts
• Get 24/7 help from StudySoup virtual teaching ass... | 634 | 1,923 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.09375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2020-50 | latest | en | 0.825147 |
https://socratic.org/questions/the-gas-inside-of-a-container-exerts-15-pa-of-pressure-and-is-at-a-temperature-o-2 | 1,638,351,363,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964359976.94/warc/CC-MAIN-20211201083001-20211201113001-00495.warc.gz | 587,341,731 | 6,115 | # The gas inside of a container exerts 15 Pa of pressure and is at a temperature of 220 ^o K. If the temperature of the gas changes to 10 ^oC with no change in the container's volume, what is the new pressure of the gas?
Feb 18, 2016
$P = 19 , 30 P a$
#### Explanation:
${10}^{o} C = 10 + {273}^{o} K$
$\frac{15}{220... | 141 | 387 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 5, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.03125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-49 | latest | en | 0.747905 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-2-1st-edition/chapter-1-equations-and-inequalities-1-3-solve-linear-equations-1-3-exercises-skill-practice-page-22/48 | 1,723,335,684,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-33/segments/1722640826253.62/warc/CC-MAIN-20240810221853-20240811011853-00380.warc.gz | 641,488,369 | 15,775 | ## Algebra 2 (1st Edition)
In order to solve the equation, we must first get the terms with variables all on one side of the equation and the constant numbers on the other side of the equation. Then, we must isolate the variable. Note, to check the solution, we plug the found value back into the equation and check tha... | 183 | 638 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.25 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-33 | latest | en | 0.872131 |
https://errorcodespro.com/type-1-type-2-errors/ | 1,708,673,165,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947474361.75/warc/CC-MAIN-20240223053503-20240223083503-00588.warc.gz | 249,185,514 | 55,851 | # What Are Type 1 & Type 2 Errors? | Definitions & Examples
This tutorial examines what is know as type 1 and type 2 errors in statistics.
If you have ever wondered what type I and type II, you have come to the right place. Although this is a fairly technical topic, an attempt will be to present the information in th... | 1,790 | 8,571 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.984375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-10 | latest | en | 0.960994 |
https://gurumuda.net/physics/coulombs-law-problems-and-solutions.htm | 1,716,583,529,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-22/segments/1715971058736.10/warc/CC-MAIN-20240524183358-20240524213358-00634.warc.gz | 233,351,099 | 47,601 | # Coulomb’s law – problems and solutions
1. Two point charges, QA = +8 μC and QB = -5 μC, are separated by a distance r = 10 cm. What is the magnitude of the electric force. The constant k = 8.988 x 109 Nm2C−2 = 9 x 109 Nm2C−2.
Known :
Charge A (qA) = +8 μC = +8 x 10-6 C
Charge B (qB) = -5 μC = -5 x 10-6 C
k = 9 ... | 1,028 | 3,206 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.3125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-22 | latest | en | 0.851216 |
https://www.coursehero.com/file/6688332/statsexam3-09b/ | 1,496,112,332,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-22/segments/1495463613738.67/warc/CC-MAIN-20170530011338-20170530031338-00190.warc.gz | 1,026,666,711 | 122,030 | statsexam3 09b
# statsexam3 09b - Economic Statistics Exam 3 Summer 2009...
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Economic Statistics Exam 3 Name: Summer 2009 PID: Please sign that you abide by the honor pledge: This exam contains twenty short answer questions ( worth 6 points each ) and fo... | 612 | 2,419 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.5 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-22 | longest | en | 0.919711 |
http://mathhelpforum.com/algebra/91690-advanced-percentage-problems.html | 1,516,483,715,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-05/segments/1516084889733.57/warc/CC-MAIN-20180120201828-20180120221828-00681.warc.gz | 241,442,989 | 11,037 | 1. ## Advanced Percentage Problems
1. a is what percent of b?
2. What percent of a is 5?
3. 20 is what percent more than 15?
4. 2/5 is what percent of b?
5. 15 is what percent less than 20?
6. 1/2 is what percent more than 1/5?
7. 2/3 is what percent less than 1 1/2?
8. If a>b, what percent more than b is a?
9... | 623 | 1,836 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 15, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-05 | latest | en | 0.914235 |
http://skepticsplay.blogspot.com/2009/05/well-ordering-math-myth.html | 1,529,459,762,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-26/segments/1529267863407.58/warc/CC-MAIN-20180620011502-20180620031502-00327.warc.gz | 285,996,162 | 19,628 | ## Thursday, May 7, 2009
### Well Ordering Math Myth
Right now I'm taking a course in analysis, so we were covering the Peano Axioms. The Peano Axioms define the set of natural numbers. The fifth Peano Axiom is the famous axiom of induction, which states the following:
Let P be a set. If P contains zero as an element... | 3,788 | 15,685 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.859375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-26 | latest | en | 0.93992 |
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/80806883/GREEKS | 1,419,640,866,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2014-52/segments/1419447549979.35/warc/CC-MAIN-20141224185909-00084-ip-10-231-17-201.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 199,702,694 | 18,805 | # GREEKS
Document Sample
``` GREEKS
The Greeks have given us feta cheese, philosophy, mathematics, and the Oedipal complex. They also tell
us how much risk our option positions have.
There are ways of estimating the risks associated with options, such as the r... | 4,382 | 18,334 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.765625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2014-52 | longest | en | 0.919223 |
https://puzzling.stackexchange.com/questions/52633/hey-watch-your-step | 1,653,486,403,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652662587158.57/warc/CC-MAIN-20220525120449-20220525150449-00267.warc.gz | 552,960,917 | 65,980 | One day, while hiking in the Jungles, we discovered a place hidden inside the woods. It seemed like it was sitting there quietly for some years now. We approached the gate. A friend of mine knocked on the door. There came a voice -
That's it. Nothing else. Every time we knocked the door, the same voice said the same t... | 806 | 2,378 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.921875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-21 | longest | en | 0.883566 |
https://www.penjiapp.com/post/optimization | 1,669,984,011,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-49/segments/1669446710902.80/warc/CC-MAIN-20221202114800-20221202144800-00496.warc.gz | 980,094,061 | 161,804 | # Optimization
Optimization refers to the maximums or minimums of a function in calculus.
Common types of optimization problems include:
Optimization Area & Perimeter
Optimization Volume & Surface Area
Optimization of the Distance Between a Point on a Curve
First step is to create two or more equations to solve t... | 814 | 2,361 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.71875 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2022-49 | latest | en | 0.757453 |
https://www.slideserve.com/karen-nichols/lines-powerpoint-ppt-presentation | 1,709,133,838,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947474737.17/warc/CC-MAIN-20240228143955-20240228173955-00279.warc.gz | 968,011,716 | 20,728 | 1 / 16
# LINES
LINES. The gradient or gradient of a line is a number that tells us how “steep” the line is and which direction it goes. This one has the greatest gradient. If you move along the line from left to right and are climbing, it is a positive gradient. This one has the smallest gradient. gradient.
## LINES... | 1,848 | 7,285 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.6875 | 5 | CC-MAIN-2024-10 | latest | en | 0.896755 |
https://myhelper.tk/arithmetic-progression-2/ | 1,561,498,397,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-26/segments/1560627999948.3/warc/CC-MAIN-20190625213113-20190625235113-00318.warc.gz | 521,906,528 | 30,320 | # EXERCISE 19.2
QUESTION 1
Find :
(i) 10 th term of the A.P.
Sol :
We have
a = 1
d = 4 – 1 = 3
= 28
(ii) 18 th term of the A.P.
Sol :
We have :
(iii) n th term of the A.P.
Sol :
We have :
a = 13
d = 8 – 13 = -5
QUESTION 2
If the sequence is an A.P. show that
Sol :
Let the sequence be an A.P. with th... | 2,391 | 6,855 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.40625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-26 | latest | en | 0.911112 |
https://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/21178/replacing-kernel-for-a-poisson-distribution-in-an-equation/21181 | 1,718,748,475,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-26/segments/1718198861794.76/warc/CC-MAIN-20240618203026-20240618233026-00731.warc.gz | 482,442,091 | 38,543 | # Replacing kernel for a Poisson distribution in an equation
In Example 4.4.2 on page 163 of Statistical Inference, the following is implied:
$\sum_{t=0}^{\infty}\frac{((1 - p)\lambda)^t}{t!} = e^{(1-p)\lambda}$
with a note that says "[the] sum is a kernel for a Poisson distribution". I understand the Poisson distri... | 556 | 1,803 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.0625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-26 | latest | en | 0.779992 |
https://www.thoughtco.com/how-much-gold-is-in-the-ocean-4165904 | 1,685,399,329,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-23/segments/1685224644913.39/warc/CC-MAIN-20230529205037-20230529235037-00105.warc.gz | 1,132,101,961 | 43,429 | # How Much Gold Is in the Ocean?
Many have tried and failed to earn a living by taking gold from the sea
In 1872, British chemist Edward Sonstadt published a report declaring the existence of gold in seawater. Since then, Sonstadt's discovery has inspired many, from well-intentioned scientists to con artists and swin... | 1,189 | 5,832 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.796875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-23 | latest | en | 0.92736 |
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/133327/distribution-of-the-radius-r-of-stars-has-a-density-function-f-r | 1,409,145,345,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2014-35/segments/1408500829393.78/warc/CC-MAIN-20140820021349-00343-ip-10-180-136-8.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 132,596,732 | 15,253 | distribution of the radius $R$ of stars has a density function $f_R$ [closed]
Assume that the distribution of the radius $R$ of stars has a density function $f_R$. Find formulas for the density and the distribution function of their volume $V = (4/3)\pi R^3$.
-
closed as too localized by t.b., cardinal, Benjamin Lim... | 561 | 2,029 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.90625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2014-35 | latest | en | 0.896964 |
http://slidegur.com/doc/18339/unit-8---gases | 1,521,437,466,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-13/segments/1521257646375.29/warc/CC-MAIN-20180319042634-20180319062634-00341.warc.gz | 261,404,537 | 9,798 | ### Unit 8 - Gases
```Unit 8
Characteristics of Gas
Pressure
Partial Pressures
Mole Fractions
Boyles Law
Charles Law
Guy-Lussac’s Law
Ideal Gas Law
Ideal Gases
Real Gases
Density of Gases
Volumes of Gases
Standard molar volume
Gas stoichiometry
Gas Laws
Effusion/Diffusion
Graham’s L... | 2,057 | 6,026 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-13 | latest | en | 0.873137 |
https://xronos.clas.ufl.edu/mac1140nowell/PrecalculusXourse/explorePolynomials/complexNumbers | 1,708,661,324,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947474360.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20240223021632-20240223051632-00882.warc.gz | 1,107,987,438 | 17,289 | $\newenvironment {prompt}{}{} \newcommand {\ungraded }[0]{} \newcommand {\HyperFirstAtBeginDocument }[0]{\AtBeginDocument }$
Intro to complex numbers and conjugates
Thus far we have focused on real numbers. However, we mentioned at the beginning that we can fully factor any polynomial of degree $n$ into $n$ linear fa... | 390 | 1,679 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 34, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-10 | latest | en | 0.921857 |
http://boards.fool.com/some-observations-on-peg-12171169.aspx?sort=recommendations | 1,526,999,717,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-22/segments/1526794864790.28/warc/CC-MAIN-20180522131652-20180522151652-00370.warc.gz | 42,198,144 | 24,449 | Message Font: Serif | Sans-Serif
No. of Recommendations: 4
Hi Fools
I would like to question the validity of the
Fool ratio. Please bear out with me in the long
argument.
Assume we have a business which is going to generate earnings
at a specified growth rate for a specified number of years. After
that its going to g... | 699 | 2,786 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.828125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-22 | latest | en | 0.962346 |
https://www.hackmath.net/en/example/7238?tag_id=36 | 1,545,141,675,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-51/segments/1544376829399.59/warc/CC-MAIN-20181218123521-20181218145521-00412.warc.gz | 906,958,978 | 6,377 | Find x
Solve:
if 2(x-1)=14, then x=
(solve an equation with one unknown)
Result
x = 8
Solution:
2(x-1)=14
2x = 16
x = 8
Calculated by our simple equation calculator.
Leave us a comment of example and its solution (i.e. if it is still somewhat unclear...):
Be the first to comment!
To solve this example are... | 849 | 3,120 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.703125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-51 | longest | en | 0.945756 |
https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/finance/negative-correlation/ | 1,656,725,051,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656103983398.56/warc/CC-MAIN-20220702010252-20220702040252-00457.warc.gz | 239,526,818 | 20,843 | # Negative Correlation
One variable rises, another falls
## What is a Negative Correlation?
A negative correlation is a relationship between two variables that move in opposite directions. In other words, when variable A increases, variable B decreases. A negative correlation is also known as an inverse correlation.... | 749 | 3,610 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.828125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2022-27 | latest | en | 0.92592 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/562240/how-to-find-the-intersection-of-three-spheres-full-solutions | 1,721,080,078,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-30/segments/1720763514713.74/warc/CC-MAIN-20240715194155-20240715224155-00260.warc.gz | 339,242,489 | 40,193 | How to find the intersection of three spheres (full solutions)?
The three equations of spheres are given
$(x-x_{1})^2+(y-y_{1})^2+(z-z_{1})^2=a^2$
$(x-x_{2})^2+(y-y_{2})^2+(z-z_{2})^2=b^2$
$(x-x_{3})^2+(y-y_{3})^2+(z-z_{3})^2=c^2$
How do I find $(x,y,z)$ analytically?
• $(x-x_{3})^2+(y-y_{3})^2+(z-z_{3})^2=a^2$ o... | 2,999 | 7,643 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.09375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-30 | latest | en | 0.855495 |
https://gmatclub.com/forum/is-the-total-number-of-divisors-of-x-3-a-multiple-of-the-85594.html | 1,511,443,330,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-47/segments/1510934806832.87/warc/CC-MAIN-20171123123458-20171123143458-00579.warc.gz | 622,210,154 | 57,378 | It is currently 23 Nov 2017, 06:22
### GMAT Club Daily Prep
#### Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
Customized
for You
we will pick new questions that match your level based o... | 5,842 | 20,698 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.953125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-47 | latest | en | 0.818338 |
http://math.soimeme.org/~arunram/Resources/TPMATSGTurningLIntoAPlanarForm.html | 1,679,536,459,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-14/segments/1679296944606.5/warc/CC-MAIN-20230323003026-20230323033026-00039.warc.gz | 33,780,798 | 3,957 | ## The Potts model and the symmetric group
Last update: 18 April 2014
## Notes and References
This is an excerpt of the paper The Potts model and the symmetric group by V.F.R. Jones. It appeared in: Subfactors: Proceedings of the Taniguchi Symposium on Operator Algebras (Kyuzeso, 1993), River Edge, NJ, World Sci. Pu... | 658 | 2,560 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 28, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.6875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-14 | latest | en | 0.895387 |
http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/34766-the-fibonacci-sequence/content/FibonacciSequence/fibonacci.m | 1,430,764,490,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2015-18/segments/1430454809062.87/warc/CC-MAIN-20150501043329-00018-ip-10-235-10-82.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 508,804,912 | 9,346 | Code covered by the BSD License
### Highlights from The Fibonacci Sequence
• fibonacciEvolution
• fibonacci(n,modulus)fibonacci: vpi tool to efficiently compute the n'th Fibonacci number and the n'th Lucas number
• fibrecur(N)Computes the Fibonacci number, F(N), using recursion (a poor choice)
• fibrecurmemo(N)Comput... | 2,685 | 8,177 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.578125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2015-18 | longest | en | 0.742993 |
https://www.lumoslearning.com/llwp/resources/educational-videos-k-12-elementary-middle-school.html?term=Counting+Strategies&submit=Search | 1,624,258,148,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-25/segments/1623488268274.66/warc/CC-MAIN-20210621055537-20210621085537-00098.warc.gz | 782,603,532 | 53,890 | # Three-Digit Subtraction with Counting Strategies: Grade 2
## By university of Houston mathematics education
The video describes counting strategies using place value to subtract.
# Multiplication - Building Arrays: Grade 2
## By university of Houston mathematics education
The video describes a student strategy f... | 759 | 3,751 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.15625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-25 | latest | en | 0.905744 |
https://programmer.help/blogs/balanced-binary-tree-and-its-c-implementation-avl.html | 1,580,095,108,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-05/segments/1579251694176.67/warc/CC-MAIN-20200127020458-20200127050458-00068.warc.gz | 601,490,835 | 6,203 | # Balanced binary tree and its C + + implementation AVL
## title: balanced binary tree (AVL) date: 2020-01-14 11:26:36 tags: data structure
#### 1.1 definition of balanced binary tree
In order to solve the problem that if the binary search tree is inserted in an inappropriate order, it will turn into a single chain ... | 2,753 | 10,184 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.734375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2020-05 | latest | en | 0.864519 |
https://cpep.org/mathematics/1436332-how-do-you-solve-this-equation-95x854.html | 1,695,361,842,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-40/segments/1695233506329.15/warc/CC-MAIN-20230922034112-20230922064112-00226.warc.gz | 211,764,807 | 7,218 | 17 September, 12:05
# How do you solve this equation: 9|5x+8|=54
+1
1. 17 September, 12:31
0
first divide both sides by 9
|5x+8|=6
then subtract eight from both sides
5x=-2
finally divide both sides by 5
x=-0.4 or - 2/5 | 90 | 226 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.8125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-40 | latest | en | 0.901497 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/proof-of-integral-property.220038/ | 1,709,575,591,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947476464.74/warc/CC-MAIN-20240304165127-20240304195127-00537.warc.gz | 911,649,169 | 15,991 | # Proof of integral property
• tronter
In summary, we are trying to prove that the integral of a constant 1-form from point a to point c is equal to the sum of the integral from a to b and b to c. This follows from the transitive property, which states that the sum of two quantities is equal to the sum of their indivi... | 1,254 | 4,041 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.34375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-10 | latest | en | 0.816062 |
https://byjus.com/question-answer/if-the-area-of-an-equilateral-triangle-is-163-cm2-then-its-perimeter-is-a/ | 1,723,019,641,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-33/segments/1722640690787.34/warc/CC-MAIN-20240807080717-20240807110717-00363.warc.gz | 118,614,666 | 22,028 | 1
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Question
# If the area of an equilateral triangle is $16\sqrt{3}{\mathrm{cm}}^{2}$, then its perimeter is (a) 48 cm (b) 24 cm (c) 12 cm (d) 36 cm
Open in App
Solution
## Given: The area of an equilateral triangle is $16\sqrt{3}{\mathrm{cm}}^{2}$. L... | 415 | 1,095 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 7, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-33 | latest | en | 0.499753 |
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/76134/a-property-of-some-sequences-of-natural-numbers-and-their-binary-representation | 1,467,120,786,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-26/segments/1466783396887.54/warc/CC-MAIN-20160624154956-00197-ip-10-164-35-72.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 202,118,323 | 21,693 | # A property of some sequences of natural numbers (and their binary representation)
Let's consider a sequence of natural numbers $a_n$, represented in binary, with the following properties:
• $\forall n \in \mathbb{N}$ the number $a_n$ is represented with $n$ binary digits
• $\forall n \in \mathbb{N}$ the first $n$ d... | 2,227 | 7,478 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.890625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-26 | latest | en | 0.831114 |
http://www.romannumerals.co/numerals-converter/cxxxv-in-numbers/ | 1,702,288,200,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-50/segments/1700679103810.88/warc/CC-MAIN-20231211080606-20231211110606-00173.warc.gz | 79,720,118 | 14,027 | ## What number is "CXXXV"?
### A: 135
CXXXV = 135
Your question is, "What is CXXXV in Numbers?". The answer is '135'. Here we will explain how to convert, write and read the Roman numeral letters CXXXV in the correct Arabic number translation.
## How is CXXXV converted to numbers?
To convert CXXXV to numbers the t... | 258 | 1,028 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.515625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-50 | latest | en | 0.78798 |
https://gameavatarvietnam.com/qa/quick-answer-how-do-you-calculate-markup-on-material.html | 1,611,454,046,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-04/segments/1610703544403.51/warc/CC-MAIN-20210124013637-20210124043637-00766.warc.gz | 358,195,672 | 8,070 | # Quick Answer: How Do You Calculate Markup On Material?
## How do you calculate a markup?
Markup is the difference between a product’s selling price and cost as a percentage of the cost.
For example, if a product sells for \$125 and costs \$100, the additional price increase is (\$125 – \$100) / \$100) x 100 = 25%.... | 1,160 | 5,064 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2021-04 | latest | en | 0.936787 |
https://study.com/academy/answer/a-satellite-with-an-orbital-period-of-exactly-24-0-h-is-always-positioned-over-the-same-spot-on-earth-this-is-known-as-a-geosynchronous-orbit-television-communication-and-weather-satellites-use-ge.html | 1,579,399,591,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-05/segments/1579250594101.10/warc/CC-MAIN-20200119010920-20200119034920-00216.warc.gz | 685,507,151 | 23,854 | # A satellite with an orbital period of exactly 24.0 h is always positioned over the same spot on...
## Question:
A satellite with an orbital period of exactly 24.0 h is always positioned over the same spot on Earth. This is known as a geosynchronous orbit. Television, communication, and weather satellites use geosyn... | 653 | 2,041 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.28125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2020-05 | longest | en | 0.794026 |
http://www.jiskha.com/display.cgi?id=1346601513 | 1,455,347,030,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-07/segments/1454701166222.10/warc/CC-MAIN-20160205193926-00287-ip-10-236-182-209.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 485,436,670 | 3,768 | Saturday
February 13, 2016
# Homework Help: Physics
Posted by Miaow on Sunday, September 2, 2012 at 11:58am.
Could someone please check another one of my answer for me? Thank you!
A commuter backs her car out of her garage with an acceleration of 1.40 m/s2. (a) How long does it take her to reach a speed of 2.00 m/s... | 250 | 682 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.859375 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-07 | longest | en | 0.899267 |
https://www.handlebar-online.com/usefull-tips/how-do-you-calculate-coupling-constant-j/ | 1,675,041,593,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-06/segments/1674764499790.41/warc/CC-MAIN-20230130003215-20230130033215-00200.warc.gz | 798,918,397 | 10,588 | # How do you calculate coupling constant J?
## How do you calculate coupling constant J?
The Karplus equation describes how the coupling constant between two protons is affected by the dihedral angle between them. The equation follows the general format of J = A + B (cos θ) + C (cos 2θ), with the exact values of A, B... | 943 | 3,911 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.21875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-06 | latest | en | 0.938496 |
https://en.khanacademy.org/math/class-9-assamese/x9e258597729d53b9:number-system/x9e258597729d53b9:real-numbers-and-their-decimal-expansions/v/converting-a-fraction-to-a-repeating-decimal | 1,695,521,173,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-40/segments/1695233506539.13/warc/CC-MAIN-20230923231031-20230924021031-00294.warc.gz | 261,362,301 | 78,268 | If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.
If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.
## Class 9 (Assamese)
### Course: Class 9 (Assamese)>Unit 1
Lesson 2: Real numbers and their deci... | 790 | 3,534 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.46875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2023-40 | latest | en | 0.941329 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/19974/limit-to-unique-combinations | 1,560,956,029,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-26/segments/1560627999000.76/warc/CC-MAIN-20190619143832-20190619165832-00378.warc.gz | 525,532,715 | 36,362 | # Limit to Unique Combinations
Suppose you have a deck of cards. Each card has n images on it. Any two cards will have exactly one matching image. What would be the formula for the maximum number of unique images and the maximum number of unique cards?
At first I thought the maximum number of images would be:
$\sum\... | 727 | 2,546 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.03125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-26 | latest | en | 0.951529 |
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/120622/2-norm-and-frobenius-norm-of-a-matrix | 1,469,294,063,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-30/segments/1469257823133.4/warc/CC-MAIN-20160723071023-00258-ip-10-185-27-174.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 152,166,846 | 17,636 | # 2-norm and Frobenius norm of a matrix
Im prooving the inequality: $\|AB\|_F \leq \|A\|_2 \|B\|_F$. To prove this I need to know, if the following is true:
1. Lets $B_{n \times r}~=~(\mathbf{b_1}, \ldots, \mathbf{b_r})$ is a matrix, $\mathbf{b_1}$, $\ldots$, $\mathbf{b_r}$ are vectors $n \times 1$, then \begin{equat... | 758 | 1,864 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.03125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-30 | latest | en | 0.706303 |
https://countjoy12.wordpress.com/tag/investigation/ | 1,529,397,883,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-26/segments/1529267861981.50/warc/CC-MAIN-20180619080121-20180619100121-00189.warc.gz | 602,298,977 | 14,888 | # Parallel and Perpendicular Lines
One of the main focuses during my first year of grad school was the idea of constructivist teaching. If you’re unfamiliar with the idea of constructivism, in short, it’s teaching in a way that gets the students to discover (construct) on their own what you want them to learn. At f... | 894 | 4,051 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.6875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-26 | latest | en | 0.977169 |
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Browse/Search:christmas%20game/PreK-12-Subject-Area/Algebra-2?ref=filter/subject | 1,544,772,855,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-51/segments/1544376825495.60/warc/CC-MAIN-20181214070839-20181214092339-00279.warc.gz | 1,057,615,981 | 40,670 | You Selected:
Keyword
christmas game
Other
Math
ELA
#### Resource Types
showing 1-24 of 71 results
Making 10 K.OA.A.4 K.OA.A.2 Christmas themed game Fun and engaging!! This resource is a PDF file, but you may run it as a slide show to be presented to your students. The Gingerbread Men in the Gingerbread House ga... | 2,137 | 8,745 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.703125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-51 | latest | en | 0.913693 |
http://guidanceportal.com/business-finance/pay-back-period.html | 1,529,831,555,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-26/segments/1529267866926.96/warc/CC-MAIN-20180624083011-20180624103011-00018.warc.gz | 141,766,249 | 6,466 | # Pay back period explained with formula and example
## Definition
Payback period is one of the capital budgeting decision making techniques which can be defined as
“The minimum period required to earn back “the cash” that was invested initially.”
In other words it is the length of time during which cash flows gene... | 1,070 | 4,811 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.78125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-26 | longest | en | 0.936906 |
https://www.ruby-forum.com/t/weird-numbers-57/96054 | 1,575,565,640,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-51/segments/1575540481281.1/warc/CC-MAIN-20191205164243-20191205192243-00522.warc.gz | 868,766,252 | 6,460 | # Weird Numbers (#57)
In reading through all the interesting solutions to this quiz, I noticed
two
things. Some solutions were easy to follow and have clever ways to do
the work.
Others were very fast, thanks to good optimizations. Let’s examine one
of each.
First, here is Brian Schroeder’s complete solution (minus a... | 2,049 | 7,522 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.546875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-51 | latest | en | 0.872514 |
https://ww2.mathworks.cn/matlabcentral/answers/8158-solving-a-simple-equation | 1,722,645,766,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-33/segments/1722640353668.0/warc/CC-MAIN-20240802234508-20240803024508-00770.warc.gz | 490,652,051 | 27,312 | # Solving a simple equation
5 次查看(过去 30 天)
James 2011-5-25
I have a function that can not be simplified further that goes something like this
0 = (1+exp(x))/(1+exp(-x))
(Simplified, my function is much longer and convoluted. The point is that I can't just write it as 'x = ...')
How can Matlab approximate this equation... | 533 | 2,053 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.78125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-33 | latest | en | 0.900886 |
http://www.jiskha.com/display.cgi?id=1163451999 | 1,462,029,647,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-18/segments/1461860111868.79/warc/CC-MAIN-20160428161511-00000-ip-10-239-7-51.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 595,396,567 | 3,574 | Saturday
April 30, 2016
Homework Help: Algebra!!
Posted by Margie on Monday, November 13, 2006 at 4:06pm.
Six pears and three apples cost \$3.90. Two pears and five apples cost \$3.30. How much does one pear cost?
Hint: You have two unknowns (variables), so you need two equations. Write one equation for each situat... | 181 | 592 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.0625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2016-18 | longest | en | 0.908485 |
https://www.bartleby.com/solution-answer/chapter-9-problem-79ap-college-physics-11th-edition/9781305952300/in-most-species-of-clingfish-family-gobiesocidae-pelvic-and-pectoral-fins-converge-to-form-a/e346f877-98d7-11e8-ada4-0ee91056875a | 1,571,450,115,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986688674.52/warc/CC-MAIN-20191019013909-20191019041409-00139.warc.gz | 797,607,656 | 76,402 | Chapter 9, Problem 79AP
### College Physics
11th Edition
Raymond A. Serway + 1 other
ISBN: 9781305952300
Chapter
Section
### College Physics
11th Edition
Raymond A. Serway + 1 other
ISBN: 9781305952300
Textbook Problem
# In most species of clingfish (family Gobiesocidae), pelvic and pectoral fins converge to form... | 708 | 2,767 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.0625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-43 | latest | en | 0.875435 |
http://mathhelpforum.com/algebra/131713-linear-equation-print.html | 1,511,376,990,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-47/segments/1510934806620.63/warc/CC-MAIN-20171122175744-20171122195744-00588.warc.gz | 191,451,670 | 4,529 | # linear equation?
• Mar 2nd 2010, 05:09 PM
SMERC
linear equation?
(Crying)
I am trying to work out a solution to a question and am having a difficulty that is probably so easy to most people out there...
I think that it is a linear equation thing, and i have read up on them on a very useful site given to me by one ... | 1,495 | 4,558 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 17, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 4.1875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2017-47 | longest | en | 0.953323 |
https://caltechmacs117b.wordpress.com/2007/02/ | 1,560,856,809,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-26/segments/1560627998716.67/warc/CC-MAIN-20190618103358-20190618125358-00241.warc.gz | 370,609,881 | 17,836 | ## Archive for February, 2007
### 117b – Some additional remarks on provably recursive functions
February 28, 2007
There are quite a few examples of natural combinatorial statements not provable in $\mbox{\sf PA}$ other than the ones discussed in lecture. The references listed below present several of them and provi... | 4,140 | 15,633 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 170, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "m... | 3.515625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-26 | latest | en | 0.908942 |
https://studysoup.com/tsg/math/276/algebra-and-trigonometry-real-mathematics-real-people/chapter/12269/10-3 | 1,603,358,045,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-45/segments/1603107879362.3/warc/CC-MAIN-20201022082653-20201022112653-00168.warc.gz | 538,672,600 | 11,583 | ×
×
# Solutions for Chapter 10.3: Topics in Analytic Geometry
## Full solutions for Algebra and Trigonometry: Real Mathematics, Real People | 7th Edition
ISBN: 9781305071735
Solutions for Chapter 10.3: Topics in Analytic Geometry
Solutions for Chapter 10.3
4 5 0 368 Reviews
22
5
##### ISBN: 9781305071735
Algebra ... | 1,076 | 3,886 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.578125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2020-45 | latest | en | 0.867519 |
https://www.12000.org/my_notes/mma_matlab_control/indexsection166.htm | 1,718,699,297,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-26/segments/1718198861747.70/warc/CC-MAIN-20240618073942-20240618103942-00803.warc.gz | 565,391,751 | 3,675 | ### 4.18 Numerically integrate f(x) on the real line
Problem: Integrate
$\int _{-2}^{2}\frac {1}{5}\left ( \frac {1}{100}\left ( 322+3x\left ( 98+x\left ( 37+x\right ) \right ) \right ) -24\frac {x}{1+x^{2}}\right ) dx$
The exact answer is $$94/25=3.76$$
Mathematica f[x_] := (1/5)(1/100(322+3*x(98+x(37+x)))- 24(x/... | 367 | 817 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 4.15625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-26 | latest | en | 0.432149 |
https://www.freemathhelp.com/forum/threads/the-value-of-dimes-and-quarters-is-1-45-if-the-quarters-were-replaced-by.109533/ | 1,561,072,621,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-26/segments/1560627999291.1/warc/CC-MAIN-20190620230326-20190621012326-00052.warc.gz | 757,856,519 | 10,102 | # The value of dimes and quarters is $1.45. If the quarters were replaced by... #### jeff221xD ##### New member The value of a number of dimes and quarters is$1.45. If the quarters were replace by nickels, the value would be $0.85. How many dimes and quarters are there? #### mmm4444bot ##### Super Moderator Staff membe... | 278 | 1,128 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.53125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2019-26 | latest | en | 0.975487 |
http://paul.oremland.net/2014/06/back-to-basics-binary-tree-deletion.html | 1,718,272,439,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-26/segments/1718198861372.90/warc/CC-MAIN-20240613091959-20240613121959-00400.warc.gz | 27,173,676 | 13,040 | ## Monday, June 2, 2014
### Back To The Basics: The Binary Tree Deletion
In my previous post Back To The Basics: The Binary Tree Traversing I discussed several common algorithms for traversing a Binary Search Tree. In this post I’d like to turn our attention to one last common algorithm, delete.
The delete algorithm... | 435 | 1,908 | {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "ma... | 3.953125 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2024-26 | latest | en | 0.808707 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/bernoulli-equation-for-rotational-flow.678331/ | 1,529,655,222,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-26/segments/1529267864364.38/warc/CC-MAIN-20180622065204-20180622085204-00013.warc.gz | 866,915,599 | 14,157 | Bernoulli Equation for Rotational Flow
1. Mar 14, 2013
soothsayer
Hi PF! I've been working on a research problem involving fluid dynamics, and I'm currently looking at a "bathtub flow". This is where water is draining through a hole, and we have a vortex. In a paper I have found dealing with this flow, the velocity ... | 606 | 2,218 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.640625 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2018-26 | latest | en | 0.937588 |
http://mathoverflow.net/revisions/26926/list | 1,368,875,088,000,000,000 | text/html | crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-20/segments/1368696382261/warc/CC-MAIN-20130516092622-00044-ip-10-60-113-184.ec2.internal.warc.gz | 165,276,916 | 4,736 | 2 added 24 characters in body
The volume of the real flag manifold $Fl_R^3 = O(3)/Z_2^3$ can be obtained on one hand by the explicit integration on the $O(N)$ invariant volume element on its big cell:
$\int_0^{\infty}dx_1\int_0^{\infty}dx_2\int_0^{\infty}dx_3(1+x_1^2+(x_3-\frac{x_1x_2}{2})^2)^{-1} \int_{-\infty}^{\in... | 501 | 1,179 | {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mat... | 3.796875 | 4 | CC-MAIN-2013-20 | latest | en | 0.5506 |
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