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A hose is left running for 240 minutes to 2 significant figures. The amount of water coming out of the hose each minute is 2.1 litres to 2 significant figures. Calculate the lower and upper bounds of the total amount of water that comes out of the hose.​

User Timbergus
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2 Answers

17 votes
17 votes

Answer:

Hello,

Explanation:

Let say t the time the hose is left running

235 ≤ t < 245 (in min)

Let say d the amount of water coming out of the hose each minute

2.05 ≤ d < 2.15 (why d : débit in french)

235*2.05 ≤ t*d < 245*2.15

481.75 ≤ t*d < 526.75 (litres)

User Jsparks
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2.6k points
16 votes
16 votes

Answer:

Lower bound:
495\; \rm L (inclusive.)

Upper bound:
505\; \rm L (exclusive.)

Explanation:

The amount of water from the hose is the product of time and the rate at which water comes out.

When multiplying two numbers, the product would have as many significant figures as the less accurate factor.

In this example, both factors are accurate to two significant figures. Hence, the product would also be accurate to two significant figures. That is:


240 * 2.1 = 5.0 * 10^(2)\; \rm L (
500\; \rm L with only two significant figures.)

Let
x denote the amount of water in liters. For
x\! to round to
5.0 * 10^(2)\; \rm L only two significant figures are kept,
495 \le x < 505. That gives a bound on the quantity of water from the hose.

User EightShirt
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