58 N 134 W is Stephens Passage, Alaska, USA. Alaska's capital city is Juneau. There have been several attempts to move the capital to Anchorage.
which capital has the coordinates of 50n latitude,98w longitude
3 + 8n = -58n = -8n = -1
It is 143 miles if you take I-71N. It is 158 miles if you take I-71N and I-77N. It is 145 miles if you take OH-58N and I-71N.
Google Earth doesn't have a listing for "Pisarivsa, Russia". I did find an entry for Pisareva, Ukraine, at 50 58N, 24 14E, and an entry for "Pisareva, Kaliningrad, Russia" at 54 43N, 20 25E. Is one of these the one you're looking for?
When you give a latitude and a longitude, you've described a single point on the earth. If there are two cities there, then both cities occupy the same place, which we suspect leads to some spirited debates. 15 degrees north and 105 degrees east describes a point in eastern Thailand, roughly 10 miles southeast of Ubon Rajathanee along Highway 24.
The force of gravity on an object with a mass of 100 kg at Pluto's surface would be approximately 6.7 N. Gravity on Pluto is only about 0.063 times that of Earth's gravity, so objects weigh much less on Pluto.
It is possible to find infinitely many polynomials of order 5 such that the first five numbers are as listed in the question and any selected number is the next. There are also non-polynomial solutions. The simplest polynomial of order 4 is Un = (n^4 - 2n^3 + 11n^2 - 58n + 144)/24 for n = 1, 2, 3, ... and accordingly, the next number in the sequence is 44.
Any number can be the next number. It is easy to find a rule based on a polynomial of order 5 such that the first five numbers are as listed in the question followed by the chosen next number. There are also non-polynomial solutions. Short of reading the mind of the person who posed the question, there is no way of determining which of the infinitely many solutions is the "correct" one.The simplest solution, based on a polynomial of order 4 ist(n) = (-5n^4 + 58n^3 - 232n^2 + 371n -186)/6 for n = 1, 2, 3, ...and accordingly, the next number is 44.
Any two numbers that you choose can be the next number. It is easy to find a rule based on a polynomial of order 6 such that the first five numbers are as listed in the question followed by the chosen next two numbers. There are also non-polynomial solutions. Short of reading the mind of the person who posed the question, there is no way of determining which of the infinitely many solutions is the "correct" one.One possible rule for the given numbers, based on a polynomial of order 4, ist(n) = (5n^4 - 58n^3 + 235n^2 - 380n + 213)/3 for n = 1, 2, 3, ...and, accordingly, the next two numbers in the sequence are 115 and 393.But it would be easy to find a rule so that the next two were 4 and 6, for example.
Tokyo, Japan is located at approximately 35.7 degrees north latitude. Some US cities that are at a similar latitude include Los Angeles, California; Memphis, Tennessee; and Raleigh, North Carolina. These cities are not exactly on the same latitude as Tokyo, but they are relatively close in terms of north-south positioning on the globe.
What number would you like to be next? Using U{n} = (5.25n⁴ - 58n³ + 249.75n² - 554n + 621)/3 it gives {88, 44, 22, 11} for n = 1, 2, 3, 4, so the next term is U{5} = 42. However, the solution I suspect your teacher wants is that it is a GP with each term half the previous term (ie a common ratio of ½) so the next term is 11×½ = 11÷2 = 5½ = 5.5