132k views
1 vote
Does anyone know the answer’s to questions 2 & 3?

Does anyone know the answer’s to questions 2 & 3?-example-1
User Mell
by
7.8k points

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

B. 11.4 mi

C. 2.6 mi

Explanation:

You can find the length of the diagonal using the Pythagorean theorem.

Where a and b are sides of a triangle, the hypotenuse c (the diagonal) is


c^2 = a^2 + b^2\\c = √(a^2+b^2)

In our problem, the sides a and b are the lengths FG and GH.

The diagonal is FH. Thus:


FH = √(FG^2+GH^2)

FG = 5 mi

GH = 4 mi


FH = √(5^2+4^2)=√(25+16)=√(41)=6.40312424

Since we're rounding to the nearest tenth of a mile, we can say that the length of the proposed road FH is 6.4 miles.

The entire distance from EH would be EF + FH.

Since EF is 5 miles, the entire distance EH using the proposed road would be:

EH = EF + FH

EH = 5 + 6.4

EH = 11.4

Answer: 11.4 miles

To answer the last question, we need the distance using existing rods.

The distance EH using existing roads is EG + GH.

EG = 10 mi

GH = 4 mi

EH = 10 + 4 = 14

Using existing roads, the distance is 14 miles.

To find the difference, we'll just subtract the 2 values.

14 - 11.4 = 2.6

Answer: 2.6 miles

User Wpercy
by
8.1k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories