Math, asked by jhawkins1006, 1 month ago

Safety standards require a pool to add 3 chlorine tablets to every 2,000 liters of water. Today, the lifeguards at Park Pool added 8 chlorine tablets to their pool's 10,000 liters of water.

Answers

Answered by bsaikumar2005
4

Answer:

This is a proportion problem. We know that for the safety standards, we add 3 chlorine tablets for every 2,000 gallons of water:

3/2000

And we want to compare this to Park Pool's standards:

8/10000

We want to compare the proportions to see which is bigger and smaller. To make this comparison easier, let's find the LCD (least common denominator) between the two:

(3/2000)*(5/5) = 15/10000

15/10000 > 8/10000

Thus, Park Pool's chlorine content is less than that of the safety standards, indicating the Park Pool doesn't add enough chlorine tablets to their pool.

Answered by 333672
0

Answer:

Thus, Park Pool's chlorine content is less than that of the safety standards, indicating the Park Pool doesn't add enough chlorine tablets to their pool.

Step-by-step explanation:

idk but this is corret

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