Probably because somebody wanted, precisely, to find the specific heat.
That depends what the original equation is.
Momentum, p, is solved by using the momentum equation: p = m*v.
The parabolic heat equation is a partial differential equation that models the diffusion of heat (i.e. temperature) through a medium through time. More information, including a spreadsheet to solve the heat equation in Excel, is given at the related link.
-a formula is used to solve a problem so is an equation some times just a little common sense -apply observed,research,hypothesizes and conclude.............and that's all.....
Use this equation to convert Celsius/Centigrade to degrees Kelvin: [K] = [°C] + 273.15
That depends what the original equation is.
Solving for y implies that there is an equation that needs to be rearranged to isolate y from all other variables and numbers. But there is no equation here.
There is no need. The first equation can be rearranged to a simple equation in just y. Multiply it by 0.2 to solve for y. Substitute the value of y in the second equation and rearrange to get a simple equation in x. Multiply by (1/6) to find x.
You need another equation to make this a linear equation so you can solve for both variables. One equation with two variables is not enough to determine the correct answer.
Algebra ygb-iboe-hvz is a type of algebraic equation known as a "ygb-iboe-hvz equation". This type of equation is a type of linear equation that is commonly used to solve for the unknown variable in a given equation. The equation is composed of three terms: ygb, iboe, and hvz. The ygb term is the coefficient of the unknown variable, the iboe term is the constant, and the hvz term is the right-hand side of the equation. To solve the equation, the coefficients of each term must be determined and the equation must be rearranged to solve for the unknown variable.
You can't. No matter what you can not know the value of one of the variables without knowing the value of the other. All the possible values they could be can be represented on a graph by the line (rearranged from the equation): y = x - 4.5
The correct ansewer is 8
correct anser is C ; y=-45
Sure. You can always 'solve for' a variable, and if it happens to be the only variable in the equation, than that's how you solve the equation.
you don't answer an equation, you solve an equation
It is a straight line equation that needs to be rearranged into slope-intercept form as follows:- 8x+20y = -80 20y = -8x-80 y = -0.4x-4
You would have a reasonable shot at finding the correct solution.