Rate of growth question

Pendergast

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Apr 12, 2021
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Hi all - I was wondering if I could get some help with this question, my brain isn't playing ball today:

If the rate of growth is 143mm per year; how long will it take to reach 20m?

I divided 20 by 143 to get 0.139... but how do I convert that back to years? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
Hi all - I was wondering if I could get some help with this question, my brain isn't playing ball today:

If the rate of growth is 143 mm per year; how long will it take to reach 20 m?

I divided 20 by 143 to get 0.139... but how do I convert that back to years? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
How many mm make 1 m?
 
This is the complete problem:

"If, in the year 2100, the rate of sea ice growth is 143mm per year, how long will the sea ice take to grow by 20m?"
Okay - as I read the problem - your answer (after multiplying by 1000 and including "units") will be correct.
 
I have a problem with the question itself! It says "If, in the year 2100, the rate of sea ice growth is 143mm per year". It does NOT say that the rate of sea ice grown remains that in future years!
 
I have a problem with the question itself! It says "If, in the year 2100, the rate of sea ice growth is 143mm per year". It does NOT say that the rate of sea ice grown remains that in future years!
You would be correct in thinking that - however for the purposes of this question it is assumed the rate of ice growth remains constant.
Of course in the real world you couldn’t make such an assumption.
 
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