subject
Mathematics, 11.02.2021 03:40 babygirlslay109

V(10, -1)->v' (i need help plz)

ansver
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: Mathematics

image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 17:00, SillyEve
In tossing one coin 10 times, what are your chances for tossing a head? a tail? 2. in tossing one coin 100 times, what are your chances for tossing a head? a tail? 3. in tossing one coin 200 times, what are your chances for tossing a head? a tail? deviation = ((absolute value of the difference between expected heads and observed heads) + (absolute value of the difference between expected tails and observed tails)) divided by total number of tosses. this value should always be positive. 4. what is the deviation for 10 tosses? 5. what is the deviation for the 100 tosses? 6. what is the deviation for 200 tosses? 7. how does increasing the total number of coin tosses from 10 to 100 affect the deviation? 8. how does increasing the total number of tosses from 100 to 200 affect the deviation? 9. what two important probability principles were established in this exercise? 10. the percent of occurrence is the obtained results divided by the total tosses and multiplied by 100%. toss the coins 100 times and record your results. calculate the percent occurrence for each combination. percent head-head occurrence: percent tail-tail occurrence: percent head-tail occurrence:
Answers: 3
image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 18:50, casianogabriel2004
Which expression shows the sum of the polynomials with like terms grouped together
Answers: 2
image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 20:00, brethan
Me! i really need to get this right before 9. prove the divisibility of 7^6+7^5-7^4 by 11. use factoring so you get a number times 11. just tell me the number. i need this done asap
Answers: 1
image
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 20:30, maxy7347go
Does the function satisfy the hypotheses of the mean value theorem on the given interval? f(x) = 4x^2 + 3x + 4, [−1, 1] no, f is continuous on [−1, 1] but not differentiable on (−1, 1). no, f is not continuous on [−1, 1]. yes, f is continuous on [−1, 1] and differentiable on (−1, 1) since polynomials are continuous and differentiable on . there is not enough information to verify if this function satisfies the mean value theorem. yes, it does not matter if f is continuous or differentiable; every function satisfies the mean value theorem.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
V(10, -1)->v' (i need help plz)...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Mathematics, 19.08.2019 21:30