The following is the answer:
Formulas are comparable to math sentences, expressions are more like phrases. Formulas are equations that appear frequently and are related to known phenomena like the area of a rectangle.
Ah, the quadratic formula is like a happy little tree in the world of mathematics. It has been around for centuries, helping us solve those tricky quadratic equations with ease. Just like a painter mixes colors on their palette, mathematicians over time refined and developed this formula to make our lives a little brighter and our math a little easier.
Yes, they commonly appear in free-fall problems.
There can be no answer since there is no equation (nor inequality ) in the question. There appear to be three unrelated expressions.
Thanks to the rubbish browser which you have to use to post the question and that we are obliged to use, all that I can see is two expressions separated by a space: there is no equation or inequality. It would appear to be two expressions in two variables and, if so, it cannot be solved.
No
Quadratic equations appear in many situations in science; one example in astronomy is the force of gravitation, which is inversely proportional to the square of the distance.
Formulas are comparable to math sentences, expressions are more like phrases. Formulas are equations that appear frequently and are related to known phenomena like the area of a rectangle.
Ah, the quadratic formula is like a happy little tree in the world of mathematics. It has been around for centuries, helping us solve those tricky quadratic equations with ease. Just like a painter mixes colors on their palette, mathematicians over time refined and developed this formula to make our lives a little brighter and our math a little easier.
Yes, they commonly appear in free-fall problems.
There can be no answer since there is no equation (nor inequality ) in the question. There appear to be three unrelated expressions.
The St. Louis Arch is in the shape of a hyperbolic cosine function It is often thought that it is in the shape of a parabola, which would have a quadratic function of y = a(x-h)^2 + k, where the vertex is h, k.
Yes, coefficients can be fractions in algebraic expressions. Fractions may appear when coefficients are expressed in a ratio or when simplifying expressions that involve division.
It will appear in the cell as you type it in. When it has been put in, you will see it in the formula bar. If you set the spreadsheet to show formulas, you can see all the formulas in their cells.
It is usually there unless you have hidden it through the View options. The Cancel and Enter buttons on it only appear on the formula bar when you start to type into a cell.
If there is a formula in the active cell, then the formula will be displayed in the formula bar and the result of the formula will appear in the cell.
Thanks to the rubbish browser which you have to use to post the question and that we are obliged to use, all that I can see is two expressions separated by a space: there is no equation or inequality. It would appear to be two expressions in two variables and, if so, it cannot be solved.