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Mathematics, 20.12.2019 23:31 Averyruss9245

Acompany is marketing its newest product to a school of 30,000 students. the company relies on internet advertisements and word-of-mouth. the company estimates that every day a random sample of 1,000 students see an internet advertisement for their product; however, some of these students may have already been exposed to their product by internet or word-of-mouth. the company also estimates that every day, 10 percent of the students who have already been exposed to the product will tell a friend about the product. assume that these students always tell a friend who hasn't already heard about the product somewhere else. if p is the number of students who have been exposed to the product after an arbitrary time t (measured in days), set up a differential equation for p in terms of t. dp/dt =

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Answers: 1
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Answer from: Quest

your exact question is kind of difficult to understand, so maybe an example will explain what you're supposed to do? i'll work through the first problem on the worksheet.

suppose you have a tray of 652 brownies, and you have 5 friends that you want to feed without picking favorites. how many brownies can you dole out to each of your friends in equal amounts? how many will be left over for you to eat?

what you're doing here is finding a way to arrange the number 652 as the sum of integer multiple of 5 and some remainder: 652=5q+r

here q ("q" for quotient) is the number of brownies each of your friends get, and r is the remainder. that's the basic idea behind division.

we break up the number 652 into parts so that the leading digit stands on its own:

652 = 600 + 52

first we check if it's possible to hand out exactly 100 brownies to each friend. with 5 friends, this means we want to know if we can take out 500 brownies from the tray. we can do this 1 time because we have 600 brownies to take from, and when we do that we're left with 100 + 52 brownies to divvy up. so we know that

652 = 1*500 + 152

next we want to know if it's possible to hand out exactly 10 brownies per friend. if we can, we have to remove 50 brownies from the tray each time until we can't. we have 152 brownies left, and we know that 3(50) = 150, so

152 = 3*50 + 2

now we have 2 brownies left in the tray. is it possible to hand 1 out to each of your 5 friends? no, you'd need a minimum of 5 brownies to do that. so the last 2 are yours.

putting everything together, we found that

652 = 1*500 + 3*50 + 2

and we can rearrange this to write

652 = 5*100 + 5*30 + 2

652 = 5(100 + 30) + 2

652 = 5*130 + 2

so q=130 and r=2.

you might be more accustomed to the table depicting the algorithm. that's just a compact way of organizing what we've done above. you can consult the image i've attached below.

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Answer from: Quest

5x10^11 x 65

325 x 10^11

or

325,

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Answer from: Quest
0.03030303030 or 0.030

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