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suppose that f: a → b. match the property on the left with the corresponding method for showing that the property holds on the right. instructions________.

User TechCrunch
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Final answer:

The question involves matching function properties with methods to demonstrate those properties and includes discussions on hypothesis testing, the scientific method in everyday problem-solving, and graphing data to determine the behavior of gases.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student's question involves understanding properties of functions and the relations between elements in sets A and B. Specifically, they are tasked with matching descriptions of function properties with methods to show that these properties hold.

Question 70 discusses properties relating to the function f and scalars A and B. For (a), if A x F = B x F, you cannot conclude that A = B without additional information because there could be a scenario where F is zero, making A and B indeterminate. In (b), the notation A FB F is unclear and may be a typo; we might assume it should read A x f = B x f, which similarly cannot lead to the conclusion that A = B without knowing more about f. For (c), if FÕA = BFÕ, we would still need more context to conclude that A = B.

The Discussion section appears to reference an inverse relationship in a function, where one variable increases as the other decreases.

In the segment discussing the scientific method, a problem-solving approach is paired with the scientific experimentation process. The corresponding everyday problem is diagnosing an electrical issue, using a hypothesis that if the outlet is the problem, other devices like a coffeemaker would also not work when plugged in.

The null and alternative hypotheses portion asks for the formulation of hypotheses, likely in the context of a statistical test, determining whether the test is right-tailed, left-tailed, or two-tailed based on the direction of the hypotheses.

Further, the instructions around plotting data points and determining if a gas exhibits properties of an ideal gas relates to a graphing exercise, involving fitting a curve or straight line to observed data and interpreting the result to ascertain the gas behavior.

User Brand
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