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If you drive 30 miles in 40 minutes, and then 15 miles in 20 minutes, do you have a constant speed?

A) yes

B) no

C) maybe, depending on the instantaneous speed at each instant of the trip

D) maybe, depending on the car

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User Djdanlib
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

A) yes

Step-by-step explanation:

First section of trip: 30 miles in 40 minutes

Second section of trip: 15 miles in 20 minutes

The formula for speed is distance over time
k=(d)/(t)

Calculate the speeds for each section of the trip.

First:

k = d/t

k = 30miles/40minutes <= reduce fraction by 10 (30÷10 and 40÷10)

k = 3 miles / 4 minutes

Second:

k = d/t

k = 15miles/20minutes <= reduce fraction by 5 (15÷5 and 20÷5)

k = 3 miles / 4 minutes

Therefore there is a constant speed because both sections of the trip are driving at "3 miles / 4 minutes".

3 miles / 4 minutes can be also formatted as:

0.75 miles per minute.

answered
User Rituraj Ratan
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8.5k points

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