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Suppose j varies jointly with g and v, and j=1 when g=6 and v=3.

Find the constant variation and find j when g=8 and v=11

User Edgard
by
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2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

The constant of variation is
(1)/(18)

Value of j is
(44)/(9)

Explanation:

Given,

j varies jointly with g and v,

That is,

j ∝ gv

⇒ j = k(gv)

Where, k is the constant of variation,

We have, j = 1 when g = 6 and v = 3

⇒ 1 = k(6 × 3) ⇒ 1 = 18k ⇒ k =
(1)/(18)

Thus, the equation that shows the given relation in j, g and v is,


j=(1)/(18)(gv)

If g = 8, v = 11,


j=(1)/(18)* 8* 11=(88)/(18)\implies j=(44)/(9)

User Byter
by
8.7k points
5 votes
"Joint variation" means "directly, but with two or more variables". Thus, we write as follows:

j α gv

We insert proportionality constant k, to change it to equality.

j = kgv

We solve k,

1 = k (4)(3)
k =1/12

j = gv/12
j = 8(11)/12
j = 22/3
User Eugen Govorun
by
8.6k points

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