4x - 9
∛(x4) √(x5) = x4/3x5/2 = x8/6x15/6 = x23/6
x-4 = 1/x4. That is as much simplification as can be done without knowing what x is.
No, a 3x5 matrix cannot be multiplied by another 3x5 matrix. For matrix multiplication to be possible, the number of columns in the first matrix must equal the number of rows in the second matrix. Since a 3x5 matrix has 5 columns and the second 3x5 matrix has 3 rows, multiplication is not defined in this case.
Maybe x4+1 If x=9 or 4(9)+1
3/5 - 1/3 = (3x3)/(5x3) - (1x5)/(3x5) = 9/15 - 5/15 = 4/15
x4 - 1.We can not "solve" this as we have not been told the value of x. However, we can simplify this expression:We have an x and a minus x here which will cancel out. Likewise the x2 and x3 will cancel out with the -x2 and -x3 respectively. This therefore leaves us with just x4 - 1.
1080 = 2^3x3^3x5 200= 2^3x5^2 LCM (1080,200) = 2^3x3^3x5^2 = 1800
5/x4
Yes. If and only if the coefficients of x4 are of the same magnitude and opposite sign.
There are 15 cells in a 3x5 table, calculated by multiplying the number of rows (3) by the number of columns (5).
(2x3)+(3x5)-(3x2)= 2x3=6 3x5=15 3x2=6 So..... 6x25-6= 6x25=150 150+6=156
X4.