Understanding the DuBois Formula: Solving for Height in Relation to Surface Area

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The discussion focuses on solving the DuBois formula for height (H) in relation to surface area (S) for a fixed weight of 70. The key step in question involves transforming the equation to isolate H, specifically how the value of 100 arises and the role of 0.01. Participants clarify that the equation should be manipulated correctly to show that S is multiplied by 100 divided by 70 raised to the power of 0.25. This leads to the final expression for height as H = 112.6 S^(4/3). The conversation emphasizes the importance of precise mathematical notation and understanding each transformation step.
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Ok, my teacher did this problem today, but there is 1 step I don't understand. If someone could explain to me how it's done, that'd be great.

Here's the problem:

Using the DuBois formula: S = 0.01W^(0.25) H^(.75)

Solve for H(Height) as a function of S (Surface Area) for people of fixed weight(W) 70

Answer:

S = 0.01(70)^(.25) H^(.75)

S = 100/70^(.25) = H^(.75)
//This is the step I don't understand. Where does the 100 come from and what happened to 0.01? Am I an idiot?

34.57 S = H^(.75)

34.57^(4/3) S^(4/3) = H

H = 112.6 S^(4/3)
 
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Evidently, you don't understand it, since you are too sloppy about how you write stuff.
 
S = 100/70^(.25) = H^(.75)
//This is the step I don't understand. Where does the 100 come from and what happened to 0.01? Am I an idiot?
It should not be "S =" at the beginning, it should be "S x", i.e. "S times". The whole thing should be:

S = 0.01(70)^(.25) H^(.75)

S x 100/70^(.25) = H^(.75)

34.57 S = H^(.75)

34.57^(4/3) S^(4/3) = H

H = 112.6 S^(4/3)
 
arildno said:
Evidently, you don't understand it, since you are too sloppy about how you write stuff.

Thanks for the support
 
AGK, how did you swap S and H^(.75)
 
S = 0.01(70^{0.25}) \cdot H^{0.75}

S = \frac{70^{0.25}}{100}\cdot H^{0.75}

\frac{S}{H^{0.75}} = \frac{70^{0.25}}{100}

\frac{1}{H^{0.75}} = \frac{70^{0.25}}{100S}

H^{0.75} = \frac{100S}{70^{0.25}}

H^{0.75} = S \times \frac{100}{70^{0.25}}

Does that make more sense now?

~H
 
Yes, that makes more sense, thanks.

I'm not sure how you got the 1 in step 4 though.
 
swears said:
Yes, that makes more sense, thanks.

I'm not sure how you got the 1 in step 4 though.

From here;

\frac{{\color{red}S}}{H^{0.75}} = \frac{70^{0.25}}{100}

Just divide both sides 'S'

\frac{1}{H^{0.75}} = \frac{70^{0.25}}{100{\color{red}S}}

Do you see?

~H
 
Yes, Thanks.
 
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