must figure out the last two values for t, plus the rule as an equation
in Algebra 1 Answers by

Your answer

Your name to display (optional):
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
Anti-spam verification:
To avoid this verification in future, please log in or register.

1 Answer

Assume linear initially, so t=as+b where a and b have to be found. 12=4a+b; 23=8a+b. Subtract first equation from second: 11=4a so a=11/4 and b=1. Now test: 12*11/4+1=34 (using input 12). This doesn't work, because the third output should be 40, not 34.

Now try quadratic: t=as^2+bs+c: 12=16a+4b+c; 23=64a+8b+c; 40=144a+12b+c. Call these equations in order A, B, C. B-A: 11=48a+4b; C-B: 17=80a+4b. Call these two equations D and E. E-D: 6=32a, so a=6/32=3/16, and 4b=11-48*3/16=11-9=2, b=2/4=1/2. So c=12-3-2=7 and t=3s^2/16+s/2+7. This equation satisfies the first three pairs of numbers (s,t). Put s=23: t=3*23^2/16+23/2+7=3*529/16+23/2+7=1587/16+23/2+7=117.6875; put s=31: t=202.6875.

(If these answers are incorrect, then it's because there is insufficient information in the question to derive an alternative solution.)

by Top Rated User (1.2m points)

Related questions

1 answer
asked Mar 1, 2019 by Joey | 888 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Feb 9, 2014 in Other Math Topics by anonymous | 531 views
1 answer
asked Oct 2, 2013 in Pre-Algebra Answers by ange_baby68@hotmail.com | 593 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Apr 25, 2013 in Algebra 1 Answers by anonymous | 760 views
1 answer
asked Nov 27, 2012 in Algebra 1 Answers by anonymous | 1.6k views
Welcome to MathHomeworkAnswers.org, where students, teachers and math enthusiasts can ask and answer any math question. Get help and answers to any math problem including algebra, trigonometry, geometry, calculus, trigonometry, fractions, solving expression, simplifying expressions and more. Get answers to math questions. Help is always 100% free!
87,516 questions
100,285 answers
2,420 comments
734,916 users