Message from @Chief Kirby
Discord ID: 816865519469854730
anyone know about algebra 2 radical functions?
What about them?
i'm trying to do my homework on them<:KEK:795742276549607456>
Aight lol
you probably can't help me with radical functions can you
I can
If I haven't forgotten it all
the picture of the problem is gonna take a while to upload...
Aight
Number 7?
yes
So a fraction as a power is another way of writing roots so it could be rewritten as cuberoot(3/4(pi)n)
You have the density so solve for n by raising the density (d) to the third power
And you have d^3=3/4(pi)n
After that it should be easy to solve for n
Then multiply d^3 by n for n*d^3=3/4(pi)
And then divide by (d^3)
for n = 3/(4(pi)d^3)
so if d= 10
so it is 3/(4000*(pi))
is the square root still underneath the pi?
in that step
There is no square root, in that step it is 10 (d) raised to the third power
Unless I read that wrong, it is a 1/3 as the power right?
oh wow, lol there is no square root, i was thinking the fraction
Lol
Yeah all of the numbers are under the 3
.........3
=========
4(10^3)(pi)
okay got it, thanks
the rest is graphing stuff and I got that stuff down it was that question that was giving me beef
Aight cool beans
I don't have to do that question on the test but we have to know it
Is there something within those topics that grinds your gears? Surely there has to be something...
huh im in algebra 2
I learned logarithms in algebra 2 also. I was introduced to them in algebra 1 but only started working with them much in algebra 2.
huh ok because I feel really out of my league lol
That is usually a good thing.
You're ahead of the game
No. There’s really nothing.