Augmented matrices word problem - tiny issue

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
2 replies · 2K views
IrinaK.
Messages
33
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Hello!
Here is the problem from Stitz-Zeager Pre-calculus book:

At 9 PM, the temperature was 60F; at midnight, the temperature was 50F; and at 6 AM,

the temperature was 70F . Use the technique in Example 8.2.3 to t a quadratic function

to these data with the temperature, T, measured in degrees Fahrenheit, as the dependent

variable, and the number of hours after 9 PM, t, measured in hours, as the independent

variable. What was the coldest temperature of the night? When did it occur?

2. Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
My question is about the number of hours as undependable variable:

do you think authors mean x1=9, x2=3, x3=9 by saying "the number of hours after 9PM"? Or do you think it should be x1=9, x2=0, x3=6, or x1=9, x2=12, x3=6?
I am confused :)

Thank you!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
IrinaK. said:

Homework Statement


Hello!
Here is the problem from Stitz-Zeager Pre-calculus book:

At 9 PM, the temperature was 60F; at midnight, the temperature was 50F; and at 6 AM,

the temperature was 70F . Use the technique in Example 8.2.3 to t a quadratic function

to these data with the temperature, T, measured in degrees Fahrenheit, as the dependent

variable, and the number of hours after 9 PM, t, measured in hours, as the independent

variable. What was the coldest temperature of the night? When did it occur?

2. Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
My question is about the number of hours as undependable variable:

do you think authors mean x1=9, x2=3, x3=9 by saying "the number of hours after 9PM"? Or do you think it should be x1=9, x2=0, x3=6, or x1=9, x2=12, x3=6?
I am confused :)

Thank you!

FWIW, 'undependable variable' = independent variable, in English. 'undependable' also means 'unreliable'.

I'm afraid the wording of the problem is rather clear: the times are supposed to be taken as hours after 9 pm. You seem to want to impose your own time scale on the problem, using midnight as the origin of the time axis. So, for the reading taken at 9 pm, t = 0 hours, and the for reading taken at midnight, t = 3 hours. Eazy, peazy.
 
SteamKing said:
FWIW, 'undependable variable' = independent variable, in English. 'undependable' also means 'unreliable'.

I'm afraid the wording of the problem is rather clear: the times are supposed to be taken as hours after 9 pm. You seem to want to impose your own time scale on the problem, using midnight as the origin of the time axis. So, for the reading taken at 9 pm, t = 0 hours, and the for reading taken at midnight, t = 3 hours. Eazy, peazy.

Right! :) Thank you, SteamKing! And sorry for the typo - I can't find the way to edit that now; of course, it is "independent".