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Each of the samples below is randomly selected from a company with 320 employees. Choose which samples are representative samples for the company. Select all that apply.  A.  25 employees on the company email list  B.  25 employees with 10 years of service or more  C.  25 employees as they begin their shifts at 3:00 pm  D.  25 employees at a company-wide assembly  E.   25 employees from the human resources department​

User Didier Spezia
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2 Answers

17 votes
17 votes

Explanation:

For all the recent strides we’ve made in the math world, like how a supercomputer finally solved the Sum of Three Cubes problem that puzzled mathematicians for 65 years, we’re forever crunching calculations in pursuit of deeper numerical knowledge. Some math problems have been challenging us for centuries, and while brain-busters like the ones that follow may seem impossible, someone is bound to solve ‘em eventually. Maybe.

For now, take a crack at the toughest math problems known to man, woman, and machine.

1. The Collatz Conjecture



DAVE LINKLETTER

Earlier this month, news broke of progress on this 82-year-old question, thanks to prolific mathematician Terence Tao. And while the story of Tao’s breakthrough is good news, the problem isn’t fully solved.

A refresher on the Collatz Conjecture: It’s all about that function f(n), shown above, which takes even numbers and cuts them in half, while odd numbers get tripled and then added to 1. Take any natural number, apply f, then apply f again and again. You eventually land on 1, for every number we’ve ever checked. The Conjecture is that this is true for all natural numbers.

Tao’s recent work is a near-solution to the Collatz Conjecture in some subtle ways. But his methods most likely can’t be adapted to yield a complete solution to the problem, as he subsequently explained. So we might be working on it for decades longer.

The Conjecture is in the math discipline known as Dynamical Systems, or the study of situations that change over time in semi-predictable ways. It looks like a simple, innocuous question, but that’s what makes it special. Why is such a basic question so hard to answer? It serves as a benchmark for our understanding; once we solve it, then we can proceed to much more complicated matters.

The study of dynamical systems could become more robust than anyone today could imagine. But we’ll need to solve the Collatz Conjecture for the subject to flourish.

7 votes
7 votes

Answer:

Sorry brillant26 or whatever gave you a invalid answer. its actually A (25 employees on the company email list) and D (25 employees at a company wide assembly)

Hope this helps!!

Have a nice day!!

Explanation:

User Zen Of Kursat
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