It is not reasonably feasible to attempt here to provide you with the weeks or months of classroom instruction which apparently are missing (since you are not familiar enough with the material to be sure even of the topic). How was it that you were assigned this homework?To be honest i dont even know if this is geometry (apologies if it is't). Well there is question 11 (everything, since it all goes together) which i dont quite understand. If you can just thoroughly explain it to me (don't quite need the answer), i'd be very grateful for your help.
This is to see our overall knowledge, and i've just never seen this type of question. If you want to be rude of me requesting for explanation, i'd rather have you to just go away and have others help me with this question. Its not like i'm asking for the answers, i just want it explained so i can learn it.
So there is this diagram, and my question is to calculate the average speed, when i had a look at the back of the book where the answers were, the answer as 3ms^-1 (^= to the power of). I dont know how it turned out to be an answer with scientific notation. It isn't "scientific" notation; it's exponential notation. The exercise is a simple application of the "slope" concept within the context of word problems.So there is this diagram, and my question is to calculate the average speed, when i had a look at the back of the book where the answers were, the answer as 3ms^-1 (^= to the power of). I dont know how it turned out to be an answer with scientific notation.
It'll probably be a lot simpler, and more effective, to wait until your class reaches this material, in order and with all the necessary background concepts, rather than attempting it, piecemeal, from out-of-context example exercises.I'm trying to learn these stuff in preparation for my year.
Seems to be something wrong with your diagram.
If the distance travelled is along the horizontal line, why is it shown along the vertical line?
Seems to me that what is meant is 4 metres travelled in 12 seconds.
can anyone tell me how to calculate the average speed
[why is] the answer [in the book written as] 3ms^-1?
Seems to be something wrong with your diagram.
If the distance travelled is along the horizontal line, why is it shown along the vertical line?
Seems to me that what is meant is 4 metres travelled in 12 seconds.
So average speed is then 4/12 = 1/3, which is 3^(-1).
If I'm wrong, I'll go stand in the corner![]()
learned something!