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The maximum weight that a rectangular beam can support varies jointly as its width and the square of its height and inversely as its length. If a beam one third 1/3 foot​ wide, one half 1/2 foot​ high, and 15 feet long can support 30 ​tons, find how much a similar beam can support if the beam is one half 1/2 foot​ wide, one third 1/3 foot​ high, and 15 feet long?

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:13.33 tons

Step-by-step explanation:

Given

Weight of a material varies as


W\propto b (width)


W\propto h^2 (height)


W\propto (1)/(L) (length)


W=k(bh^2)/(L)

Dimension of first beam


b=(1)/(3) foot


h=(1)/(2) foot


L=15 foot

Weight supported
W=20 tons

Second beam


b=(1)/(2) foot


h=(1)/(3) foot


h=15 feet

let weight of second beam be
W_2

taking both beams at the same time


(20)/(W_2)=((1)/(3)* ((1)/(2))^2)/(15)* (15)/((1)/(2)* ((1)/(3))^2)


(20)/(W_2)=(3)/(2)


W_2=(40)/(3) \approx 13.33 tons

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