A Problem Solving Approach to Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers (12th Edition)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780321987297
Author: Rick Billstein, Shlomo Libeskind, Johnny Lott
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 1.1A, Problem 13A
Assessment 1-1A
Three closed boxes (A, B, and C) of fruit arrive as a gift from a friend. Each box is mislabeled. How could you choose only one fruit from one box to decide how the boxes should be labeled?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Q1) Classify the following statements as a true or false statements
a. Any ring with identity is a finitely generated right R module.-
b. An ideal 22 is small ideal in Z
c. A nontrivial direct summand of a module cannot be large or small submodule
d. The sum of a finite family of small submodules of a module M is small in M
A module M 0 is called directly indecomposable if and only if 0 and M are
the only direct summands of M
f. A monomorphism a: M-N is said to split if and only if Ker(a) is a direct-
summand in M
& Z₂ contains no minimal submodules
h. Qz is a finitely generated module
i. Every divisible Z-module is injective
j. Every free module is a projective module
Q4) Give an example and explain your claim in each case
a) A module M which has two composition senes 7
b) A free subset of a modale
c) A free module
24
d) A module contains a direct summand submodule 7,
e) A short exact sequence of modules 74.
*************
*********************************
Q.1) Classify the following statements as a true or false statements:
a. If M is a module, then every proper submodule of M is contained in a maximal
submodule of M.
b. The sum of a finite family of small submodules of a module M is small in M.
c. Zz is directly indecomposable.
d. An epimorphism a: M→ N is called solit iff Ker(a) is a direct summand in M.
e. The Z-module has two composition series.
Z
6Z
f. Zz does not have a composition series.
g. Any finitely generated module is a free module.
h. If O→A MW→ 0 is short exact sequence then f is epimorphism.
i. If f is a homomorphism then f-1 is also a homomorphism.
Maximal C≤A if and only if is simple.
Sup
Q.4) Give an example and explain your claim in each case:
Monomorphism not split.
b) A finite free module.
c) Semisimple module.
d) A small submodule A of a module N and a homomorphism op: MN, but
(A) is not small in M.
Prove that
Σ
prime p≤x
p=3 (mod 10)
1
Ρ
=
for some constant A.
log log x + A+O
1
log x
"
Chapter 1 Solutions
A Problem Solving Approach to Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers (12th Edition)
Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 a. If a fixed number...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 A student says she...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 Abby and Dan are...Ch. 1.1 - Consider a game where you have two distict piles...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 A mathematician named...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 The figure below...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-1 The distance around...Ch. 1.1 - Work in pairs on the following versions of a game...Ch. 1.1 - John asks why the last step of Polyas four-step...Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 Connecting...
Ch. 1.1 - Mathematical Connections 1-2 Connecting...Ch. 1.1 - National Assessment of Educational Progress NAEP...Ch. 1.1 - A pattern of dots is shown above. How many dots...Ch. 1.1 - Susie said, I have 83c but fewer than 10 coins....Ch. 1.1 - An Introduction to Problem Solving Sam folds a...Ch. 1.1A - Use the approach in Gausss Problem to find the...Ch. 1.1A - Use the ideas in drawings a and b to find the...Ch. 1.1A - Find the sum 36+37+38+39+...+146+147.Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A Cookies are sold singly or in...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A In a big red box, there are 7...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A How many triangles are in the...Ch. 1.1A - Without computing each sum of the arithmetic...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A Alababa, Bubba, Cory, and Dandy...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A How many ways can you make change...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A The following is a magic square...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A Debbie and Amy began reading a...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A The 14 digits of a credit card are...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A Three closed boxes A, B, and C of...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A An electrician charges 50 per hour...Ch. 1.1A - Assessment 1-1A Kathy stood on the middle rung of...Ch. 1.1B - Use the approach in Gausss Problem to find the...Ch. 1.1B - Use the diagram below to explain how to find the...Ch. 1.1B - Find the sum of 58+59+60+61+...+203.Ch. 1.1B - Eve Merriam " titled her childrens book...Ch. 1.1B - Prob. 5ACh. 1.1B - How many squares are in the following figure?Ch. 1.1B - If P=1+3+5+7+...+99 and Q=5+7+9...+101 are sums of...Ch. 1.1B - The sign says that you are leaving Missoula, Butte...Ch. 1.1B - Marc goes to the store with exactly 1.00 in...Ch. 1.1B - Find a 3-by-3 magic square using the numbers 3, 5,...Ch. 1.1B - Eight marbles look alike, but one is slightly...Ch. 1.1B - Recall the song "TheTwelveDaysofChristmas": On the...Ch. 1.1B - a. Suppose you have quarters, dimes and pennies...Ch. 1.1B - Suppose you buy lunch for the math club. You have...Ch. 1.1B - One winter night the temperature fell 15 degrees...Ch. 1.2 - a. If a fixed number is added to each term of an...Ch. 1.2 - A student says she read that Thomas Robert Malthus...Ch. 1.2 - MATHEMATICAL CONNECTIONS Abby to take place in 5...Ch. 1.2 - MATHEMATICAL CONNECTIONS The arithmetic average of...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 5MCCh. 1.2 - Prob. 6MCCh. 1.2 - Prob. 7MCCh. 1.2 - Prob. 8MCCh. 1.2 - Prob. 9MCCh. 1.2 - Prob. 10MCCh. 1.2 - The following pattern is called Pascals triangle....Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 12MCCh. 1.2 - MATHEMATICAL CONNECTIONS Joey said that 4, 24, 44,...Ch. 1.2 - Mathematical Connections A1 and Betty were asked...Ch. 1.2 - MATHEMATICAL CONNECTIONS A student claims the...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 16MCCh. 1.2 - Mathematical connections 12 In a baseball league...Ch. 1.2 - Mathematical connections 12 How many ways can you...Ch. 1.2 - Mathematical connections 12 Tents hold...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 1NAEPCh. 1.2 - NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS NAEP...Ch. 1.2 - A car can seat c adults. A van can seat 4 more...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 4NAEPCh. 1.2A - ASSESSEMENT For each of the following sequences of...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT Each of the following sequences is...Ch. 1.2A - Assessment Find the 100th term and the nth term...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT Use a traditional clock face to...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT The pattern 1,8,27,64,125,... is a...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT The first windmill has 5 matchstick...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT In the following sequence, the figures...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT The school population for a certain...Ch. 1.2A - Joes annual income has been increasing each year...Ch. 1.2A - The first difference of a sequence is the...Ch. 1.2A - List the next three terms to continue a pattern in...Ch. 1.2A - Assessment How many terms are there in each of the...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT Find the first five terms in sequences...Ch. 1.2A - Find a counterexample for each of the following:...Ch. 1.2A - Assume that the following patterns are built of...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT Consider the sequences given in the...Ch. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT A sheet of paper is cut into 5...Ch. 1.2A - Assessment Each of the following sequences is...Ch. 1.2A - Assessment A Fibonacci-type sequence is a sequence...Ch. 1.2A - Prob. 20ACh. 1.2A - ASSESSMENT A new pair of tennis shoes cost 80. If...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSEMENT For each of the following sequences of...Ch. 1.2B - Assessment Each of the following sequences is...Ch. 1.2B - Find the 100th term and the nth term for each of...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Use a traditional clock face to...Ch. 1.2B - Assessment Observe the following pattern:...Ch. 1.2B - In the following pattern, one hexagon takes 6...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Each successive figure below is made of...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT A tank contains 15,360L of water. At...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT The Washington Middle School time is an...Ch. 1.2B - The first difference of a sequence is the...Ch. 1.2B - Prob. 11ACh. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT How many terms are there in a following...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Find the first five terms in sequences...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Find a counterexample for each of the...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Assume the following pattern with terms...Ch. 1.2B - ASSESSMENT Consider the sequences given in the...Ch. 1.2B - Female bees are born fertilized eggs, and male...Ch. 1.2B - Assessment Each of the following sequences is...Ch. 1.2B - Prob. 19ACh. 1.2B - Starting with 1 and 1 as the first two terms of...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW If today is Sunday, July 4, and...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Jackie spent 40 on two items. If...Ch. 1.CR - A nursery rhyme states: A diller, a dollar, a ten...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW List three more terms that...Ch. 1.CR - Find a possible nth term in each of the following:...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 6CRCh. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Find the following sums: a....Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 8CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 9CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 10CRCh. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Solve the following equations: a....Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW If fence posts are to be placed...Ch. 1.CR - If a complete rotation of a car tire moves car...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW The members of Mrs. Grants class...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW A carpenter has three large...Ch. 1.CR - Use differences to find the next term in the...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW An ant farm can hold 100,000...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Tomas team entered a mathematics...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Three pieces of wood are needed...Ch. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW How many four-digit numbers have...Ch. 1.CR - If n and m are natural numbers and nm, how many...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 22CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 23CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 24CRCh. 1.CR - a. If every second term in an arithmetic sequence...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 26CRCh. 1.CR - CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Each of the following is a...Ch. 1 - NOW TRY THIS Explain whether the approach in...Ch. 1 - NOW TRY THIS Find the sum of consecutive natural...Ch. 1 - NOW TRY THIS Each of 16 people in a round-robin...Ch. 1 - NOW TRY THIS An elevator stopped at the middle...Ch. 1 - Prob. 5NTCh. 1 - NOW TRY THIS A prime number is a natural number...Ch. 1 - In Figure 13, we want to know how many different...Ch. 1 - Prob. 8NTCh. 1 - NOW TRY THIS Consider the rectangular numbers in...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, subject and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Prove that, for x ≥ 2, d(n) n2 log x = B ― +0 X (금) n≤x where B is a constant that you should determine.arrow_forwardProve that, for x ≥ 2, > narrow_forwardI need diagram with solutionsarrow_forwardT. Determine the least common denominator and the domain for the 2x-3 10 problem: + x²+6x+8 x²+x-12 3 2x 2. Add: + Simplify and 5x+10 x²-2x-8 state the domain. 7 3. Add/Subtract: x+2 1 + x+6 2x+2 4 Simplify and state the domain. x+1 4 4. Subtract: - Simplify 3x-3 x²-3x+2 and state the domain. 1 15 3x-5 5. Add/Subtract: + 2 2x-14 x²-7x Simplify and state the domain.arrow_forwardQ.1) Classify the following statements as a true or false statements: Q a. A simple ring R is simple as a right R-module. b. Every ideal of ZZ is small ideal. very den to is lovaginz c. A nontrivial direct summand of a module cannot be large or small submodule. d. The sum of a finite family of small submodules of a module M is small in M. e. The direct product of a finite family of projective modules is projective f. The sum of a finite family of large submodules of a module M is large in M. g. Zz contains no minimal submodules. h. Qz has no minimal and no maximal submodules. i. Every divisible Z-module is injective. j. Every projective module is a free module. a homomorp cements Q.4) Give an example and explain your claim in each case: a) A module M which has a largest proper submodule, is directly indecomposable. b) A free subset of a module. c) A finite free module. d) A module contains no a direct summand. e) A short split exact sequence of modules.arrow_forward1 2 21. For the matrix A = 3 4 find AT (the transpose of A). 22. Determine whether the vector @ 1 3 2 is perpendicular to -6 3 2 23. If v1 = (2) 3 and v2 = compute V1 V2 (dot product). .arrow_forward7. Find the eigenvalues of the matrix (69) 8. Determine whether the vector (£) 23 is in the span of the vectors -0-0 and 2 2arrow_forward1. Solve for x: 2. Simplify: 2x+5=15. (x+3)² − (x − 2)². - b 3. If a = 3 and 6 = 4, find (a + b)² − (a² + b²). 4. Solve for x in 3x² - 12 = 0. -arrow_forward5. Find the derivative of f(x) = 6. Evaluate the integral: 3x3 2x²+x— 5. - [dz. x² dx.arrow_forward5. Find the greatest common divisor (GCD) of 24 and 36. 6. Is 121 a prime number? If not, find its factors.arrow_forward13. If a fair coin is flipped, what is the probability of getting heads? 14. A bag contains 3 red balls and 2 blue balls. If one ball is picked at random, what is the probability of picking a red ball?arrow_forward24. What is the value of ¿4, where i 25. Simplify log2 (8). = −1? 26. If P(x) = x³- 2x² + 5x - 10, find P(2). 27. Solve for x: e2x = 7.arrow_forwardarrow_back_iosSEE MORE QUESTIONSarrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College Algebra (MindTap Course List)AlgebraISBN:9781305652231Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff HughesPublisher:Cengage LearningGlencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897...AlgebraISBN:9780079039897Author:CarterPublisher:McGraw Hill
- Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGALAlgebra & Trigonometry with Analytic GeometryAlgebraISBN:9781133382119Author:SwokowskiPublisher:CengageCollege AlgebraAlgebraISBN:9781305115545Author:James Stewart, Lothar Redlin, Saleem WatsonPublisher:Cengage Learning
College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Algebra
ISBN:9781305652231
Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff Hughes
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897...
Algebra
ISBN:9780079039897
Author:Carter
Publisher:McGraw Hill
Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...
Algebra
ISBN:9780547587776
Author:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Publisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Algebra & Trigonometry with Analytic Geometry
Algebra
ISBN:9781133382119
Author:Swokowski
Publisher:Cengage
College Algebra
Algebra
ISBN:9781305115545
Author:James Stewart, Lothar Redlin, Saleem Watson
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Find number of persons in a part with 66 handshakes Combinations; Author: Anil Kumar;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33TgLi-wp3E;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Discrete Math 6.3.1 Permutations and Combinations; Author: Kimberly Brehm;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1m9sB5XZQc;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
How to use permutations and combinations; Author: Mario's Math Tutoring;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEGxh_D7yKU;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Permutations and Combinations | Counting | Don't Memorise; Author: Don't Memorise;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NAASclUm4k;License: Standard Youtube License
Permutations and Combinations Tutorial; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJnIdRXUi7A;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY