Asked by Paragon
consider a triangle with vertices (a,b), (c,d), (e,f), with the area of the triangle b/2
a = area of an equilateral triangle with side length b
c = length of diagonal of a cube with side length b
a/c = the positive asymptote of the conic equation
(x^2)-2(y^2)=6
d = volume of largest cube that can be contained in a sphere with a radius of a/2
e = c less than the product of a and b
what is the value of the sum of the possible values of f?
a = area of an equilateral triangle with side length b
c = length of diagonal of a cube with side length b
a/c = the positive asymptote of the conic equation
(x^2)-2(y^2)=6
d = volume of largest cube that can be contained in a sphere with a radius of a/2
e = c less than the product of a and b
what is the value of the sum of the possible values of f?
Answers
Answered by
drwls
"a" cannot be a linear dimension, as in the coordinate (a,b), and at the same time be an area, as in "area of an equilateral triangle with side length b ". Also, an asymptote cannot be defined by a single number. The problem is flawed.
Answered by
Jacob
i have a question with my algebra hw about (7Xto the6*ytothe9)to the4/3xtothe 10*y to the 4
Answered by
god
flawed
Answered by
Tiarre
you is dumb if you don't know how to do this...
haha
haha
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.