25.6k views
4 votes
Cesar invests $8200 in two different accounts. The first account paid 13 %, the second account paid 2 % in interest. At the end of the first year he had earned $461 in interest. How much was in each account?

User Dayshawn
by
5.5k points

1 Answer

1 vote

a = amount invested at 13%

b = amount invested at 2%

we know the total amount invested is 8200, so if the first amount is say "a", the second amount must be the slack left from subtracting "a", namely b = 8200 - a.

we also know 13% of "a" plus 2% of "b" yielded an interest of $461 in a year.


\bf \begin{array} \cline{1-1} \textit{a\% of b}\\ \cline{1-1} \\ \left( \cfrac{a}{100} \right)\cdot b \\\\ \cline{1-1} \end{array}~\hspace{5em}\stackrel{\textit{13\% of a}}{\left( \cfrac{13}{100}\right)a\implies 0.13a}~\hfill \stackrel{\textit{2\% of b}}{\left( \cfrac{2}{100} \right)b\implies 0.02b} \\\\[-0.35em] ~\dotfill


\bf \stackrel{\textit{sum of the percentages}}{0.13a+0.02b}~~=~~\stackrel{\textit{yield for 1 year}}{461}\implies 0.13a+0.02\left(\boxed{8200-a} \right) = 461 \\\\\\ 0.13a+164-0.02a=461\implies 0.11a+164=461\implies 0.11a=297 \\\\\\ a = \cfrac{297}{0.11}\implies \blacktriangleright a = 2700 \blacktriangleleft ~\hfill b = 8200-2700\implies \blacktriangleright b = 5500 \blacktriangleleft

User BFil
by
4.7k points