Simply that, an "equation".
Simply that, an "equation".
Simply that, an "equation".
Simply that, an "equation".
Simply that, an "equation".
and equation such a Ax+By=C relates two quantities, x and y, we can generalize to Ax+By +Cz+ as many as wel want...=C where x, y, z etc. are the quantities we are relating Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc
796
Euler's formula is important because it relates famous constants, such as pi, zero, Euler's number 'e', and an imaginary number 'i' in one equation. The formula is (e raised to the i times pi) plus 1 equals 0.
It is a N by N matrix that relates the variation of each variable to the previous variations of itself and the other N-1 variables. For instance; in the 2by2 variational matrix [Fxx, Fyx; Fxy, Fyy], Fyx gives the component(if any) of Y variation that comes from the previous X variation.
A pebble is dropped from the top of a 144-foot building. The height of the pebble h after t seconds is given by the equation h=−16t2+144 . How long after the pebble is dropped will it hit the ground?Interpretationa) Which variable represents the height of the pebble, and in what units?b) Which variable represents the time in the air, and in what units?c) What equation relates the height of the object to its time in the air?d) What type of equation is this?e) What are you asked to determine?
It is often called a formula.
A mathematical formula, such as Speed = Distance / Time for example.
A proportion is generally multiplicative relationship between two measures of a quantity. An equation is a mathematical statement that relates two quantities. The quantities may contain a number of expressions, with each expression comprising a number of numerical constants, variables and functions.
and equation such a Ax+By=C relates two quantities, x and y, we can generalize to Ax+By +Cz+ as many as wel want...=C where x, y, z etc. are the quantities we are relating Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc
The combined gas relates the variables of pressure (P), volume (V), temperature (T), and molar amount (n). The equation relating these four variables is the Ideal Gas Law of PV = nRT, where R is the Ideal Gas Constant.
A function is a relationship between quantities (variables) that occurs when the value of one of the quantities can be given uniquely by specified values of the other quantities. The variables involved can be either independent or dependent. The values of certain variables are fixed while others are allowed to change. The fixed variables are called the independent variables, and the dependent variables are those that change in response to the given value of the independent variable. A function therefore relates dependent variables to independent variables, the only restriction being that each value of the dependent variable is given uniquely by one, and only one, value for each of the independent variables.
Since this is a linear equation with 2 variables, it is an unsolvable equation as a and b could be anything, to find an exact answer you need another equation that relates to the first one.
How about e = mc2 ? e = energy, m = mass, c = velocity of light in vacuum.
Your equation has two variables in it ... 'a' and 'x'. So the solution is a four-step process: 1). Get another independent equation that relates the same two variables. 2). Solve one of the equations for one of the variables. 3). Substitute that into the other equation, yielding an equation in a single variable. Solve that one for the single variable. 4). Substitute that value back into the first equation, and solve it for the second variable.
extremely vague question, Here is one F(w)=w+2 length = 2 more then the width its a function
An equation that relates the reaction to the concentrations of the reactants
Follow this procedure: 1). Ask a question. (You haven't done that yet.) 2). Consider the equation as it relates to the question. 3). Operate on the equation, always using legitimate algebraic manipulations, so as to rearrange the equation, or isolate the variables, as required to answer the specific question that has been asked. That's the best way to "work it out".