Math, asked by sooolooo, 4 months ago

the amount of money in an account may increase due to rising stock prices and decrease due to falling stock prices. mason is studying the change in the amount of money in two accounts, a and b, over time.
the amount f(x), in dollars, in account a after x years is represented by the function below:
f(x) = 10,125(1.83)x
part a: is the amount of money in account a increasing or decreasing and by what percentage per year?
justify your answer. (5 points)

part b: the table below shows the amount g(r), in dollars, of money in account b after r years.
r (number of years) 1 2 3 4 g(r) (amount in dollars) 9,638 18,794.10 36,648.50 71,464.58

which account recorded a greater percentage change in amount of money over the previous year?

justify your answer

spam allowed xD​

Answers

Answered by XxxRAJxxX
1

Answer:

Account A: Decreasing at 8 % per year

Account B: Decreasing at 10.00 % per year

The amount f(x), in dollars, in account A after x years is represented by the function below:

f(x) = 10,125(1.83)x

Account B shows the greater percentage

change

Step-by-step explanation:

Part A: Percent change from exponential

formula

f(x) = 9628(0.92)*

The general formula for an exponential

function is

y = ab^x, where

b = the base of the exponential function.

if b < 1, we have an exponential decay

function.

f(x) decreases as x increases.

Account A is decreasing each year.

We can rewrite the formula for an

exponential decay function as:

y= a(1 – b)”, where

1- b = the decay factor

b = the percent change in decimal

form

If we compare the two formulas, we find

0.92 = 1- b

b = 1 - 0.92 = 0.08 = 8 %

The account is decreasing at an annual rate of 8%. The account is decreasing at an annual rate of 10.00%.

Account B recorded a greater percentage change in the amount of money over the previous year.

Answered by SaranshThakur21
65

Pythagorean theorem, the well-known geometric theorem that the sum of the squares on the legs of a right triangle is equal to the square on the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle)—or, in familiar algebraic notation, a2 + b2 = c2. ... Nevertheless, the theorem came tobe credited to Pythagoras.

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