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Ross will make a water balloon that can be modeled with a sphere. A constraint he must consider is that when the radius of the balloon exceeds 5 inches, the balloon will pop. If he uses a garden hose with a flow rate of 12 gallons per minute to fill up the balloon, for how many seconds can he fill it before it pops? Round to the nearest tenth of a second. (1 gallon = 231 cubic inches)

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User Cella
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2 Answers

9 votes

Answer: no

Explanation:

User Arathi Sreekumar
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5.1k points
11 votes

Ross can fill the water balloon for approximately 11.34 seconds before it pops, given the constraints.

How did we get the value?

Calculate
\(V_{\text{max}}\):


\[ R = 5 \, \text{inches} \]


\[ V_{\text{max}} = (4)/(3)\pi * (5^3) \]


\[ V_{\text{max}} = (4)/(3)\pi * 125 \]


\[ V_{\text{max}} \approx 523.8 \, \text{cubic inches} \]

Convert the flow rate to cubic inches per minute:


\[ \text{Flow rate} = 12 \, \text{gallons/minute} * 231 \, \text{cubic inches/gallon} \]


\[ \text{Flow rate} \approx 2772 \, \text{cubic inches/minute} \]

Calculate the time in minutes:


\[ \text{Time (minutes)} = \frac{V_{\text{max}}}{\text{flow rate}} \]


\[ \text{Time (minutes)} = (523.8)/(2772) \]


\[ \text{Time (minutes)} \approx 0.1890 \, \text{minutes} \]

Convert the time to seconds:


\[ \text{Time (seconds)} = \text{Time (minutes)} * 60 \]


\[ \text{Time (seconds)} \approx 11.34 \, \text{seconds} \]

So, Ross can fill the water balloon for approximately 11.34 seconds before it pops, given the constraints.

User Sijin
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5.0k points