Question
reply to and create a similar example and resolve it
by Joe Mendez - Wednesday, 13 November 2024, 7:51 PM
Number of replies: 1
10x-8x=12
combine to the left (10x-8x) =12
becomes 2x=12
divide by both sides x=12/2
solve x=6
solve the equation: A patient needs 300 mg of a medication per day, divided into equal doses taken every 8 hours. How much medication (x) should each dose contain?
3x=300
divide both sides by 3 and solve for x
x=300/3
x=100
by Joe Mendez - Wednesday, 13 November 2024, 7:51 PM
Number of replies: 1
10x-8x=12
combine to the left (10x-8x) =12
becomes 2x=12
divide by both sides x=12/2
solve x=6
solve the equation: A patient needs 300 mg of a medication per day, divided into equal doses taken every 8 hours. How much medication (x) should each dose contain?
3x=300
divide both sides by 3 and solve for x
x=300/3
x=100
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
**Reply to Joe Mendez:**
Great work on solving the equation and providing a clear step-by-step breakdown! Here’s a similar example for us to work through together.
**Example:**
Solve the equation: A car travels a total distance of 240 miles. If the car travels at a constant speed of 60 miles per hour for some hours, and then at 40 miles per hour for the rest of the journey, how long did the car travel at 40 miles per hour if the entire trip took 4 hours?
Let \( x \) be the time (in hours) traveled at 40 miles per hour. The time traveled at 60 miles per hour will then be \( 4 - x \).
The distance traveled at 60 miles per hour is given by the formula:
Distance = Speed × Time
So, the distance is:
\( \text{Distance at 60 mph} = 60 \times (4 - x) \)
The distance traveled at 40 miles per hour is:
\( \text{Distance at 40 mph} = 40 \times x \)
Since the total distance is 240 miles, we can set up the equation:
\[ 60(4 - x) + 40x = 240 \]
Now, let's solve for \( x \):
1. Distribute the 60:
\( 240 - 60x + 40x = 240 \)
2. Combine like terms:
\( 240 - 20x = 240 \)
3. Subtract 240 from both sides:
\( -20x = 0 \)
4. Divide by -20:
\( x = 0 \)
So, the car did not travel at 40 miles per hour at all during the trip; it traveled the entire distance at 60 miles per hour.
Feel free to reach out if you have any more questions or need further clarification!
Great work on solving the equation and providing a clear step-by-step breakdown! Here’s a similar example for us to work through together.
**Example:**
Solve the equation: A car travels a total distance of 240 miles. If the car travels at a constant speed of 60 miles per hour for some hours, and then at 40 miles per hour for the rest of the journey, how long did the car travel at 40 miles per hour if the entire trip took 4 hours?
Let \( x \) be the time (in hours) traveled at 40 miles per hour. The time traveled at 60 miles per hour will then be \( 4 - x \).
The distance traveled at 60 miles per hour is given by the formula:
Distance = Speed × Time
So, the distance is:
\( \text{Distance at 60 mph} = 60 \times (4 - x) \)
The distance traveled at 40 miles per hour is:
\( \text{Distance at 40 mph} = 40 \times x \)
Since the total distance is 240 miles, we can set up the equation:
\[ 60(4 - x) + 40x = 240 \]
Now, let's solve for \( x \):
1. Distribute the 60:
\( 240 - 60x + 40x = 240 \)
2. Combine like terms:
\( 240 - 20x = 240 \)
3. Subtract 240 from both sides:
\( -20x = 0 \)
4. Divide by -20:
\( x = 0 \)
So, the car did not travel at 40 miles per hour at all during the trip; it traveled the entire distance at 60 miles per hour.
Feel free to reach out if you have any more questions or need further clarification!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.