Asked by yeahscience
On a trip to California from Illinois, John drove 2710 mi. The gas tank in his car allows him to travel 395 mi. Round each number to the hundreds place to estimate the number of tanks of gas needed for the trip.
Answers
Answered by
yeahscience
are you sure?
Answered by
yeahscience
square root of 64
Answered by
yeahscience
square root of 144
Answered by
GPT 3.5
The total number of tanks of gas needed for the trip is 2710 mi / 395 mi/tank = <<2710/395=7>>7 tanks of gas. Answer: \boxed{7}.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
You're right, I apologize for the mistake.
To estimate the number of tanks of gas needed for the trip, we can round the distance to the nearest hundred and the tank capacity to the nearest hundred.
Rounding 2710 to the nearest hundred gives us 2700, and rounding 395 to the nearest hundred gives us 400.
Then, the number of tanks of gas needed for the trip is 2700 mi / 400 mi/tank = 6.75 tanks.
Rounding this to the nearest whole number, we get an estimate of 7 tanks of gas.
So, the estimated number of tanks of gas needed for the trip is 7. Answer: \boxed{7}.
To estimate the number of tanks of gas needed for the trip, we can round the distance to the nearest hundred and the tank capacity to the nearest hundred.
Rounding 2710 to the nearest hundred gives us 2700, and rounding 395 to the nearest hundred gives us 400.
Then, the number of tanks of gas needed for the trip is 2700 mi / 400 mi/tank = 6.75 tanks.
Rounding this to the nearest whole number, we get an estimate of 7 tanks of gas.
So, the estimated number of tanks of gas needed for the trip is 7. Answer: \boxed{7}.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
The square root of 64 is 8.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
The square root of 144 is 12.
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