Maria Saavedra ECT122 Week 1 05/07/2014 Chapter 1Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Practice Problems *(Be sure to put the units in; volts‚ amps‚ etc.) 1.One coulomb of charge passes a point every 20 seconds. Calculate the value of the current through the point. I=Q/t = 1C/20s = .05C/s= .05 A x10^-3 C = 50mA 2.A total charge of 2.5 × 10-3 C passes a point every 40 seconds. Calculate the value of the current through the point. I=Q/t =0.0025C/40s= 6.25 C/s = 6.25 A 4.A total charge of 50 × 10-3 C passes a point
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for the Ambassador China project. This calculation uses the following assumptions: 1. Calculations are done on a nominal basis‚ converting the salvage value estimate from a real to a nominal value (638 = 500(1.05)5) using the 5% inflation estimate; salvage = book value so no taxes are incurred on salvage. 2. Depreciation is calculated at [4‚000 – 638 (salvage) ]/ 5 = 672.4 per year. 3. Cars sales occur in year 1
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Week 1 (6) Introduction Chapters 1‚ 2. Problem set 1.1 a. Give a definition of the process of (economic) globalization. b. For many people‚ however‚ the globalization process is more than just economic globalization‚ and the advantages and/or disadvantages of globalization are spread over a much wider area than just international economics. Give a few examples. 1.2 a. How can globalization and international economic integration be measured (3 indicators)? b. Use the three
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Shania Lewis Period 6B September 4‚ 2012 Problem of the Week: The Broken Eggs Problem Statement: A farmer is carrying her eggs in a cart when she accidentally spills every one of them and they all break. She decides to go to her insurance agent‚ who asks her how many eggs she had. She’s not sure but she does know some information from various ways she tried to pack her eggs. She knows that when she put her eggs in groups of one‚ two‚ three‚ four‚ five‚ and six‚ there was always one egg left
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On April 21‚ 2014‚ Alligator Corporation received a charter granting the right to issue 100‚000 shares of $100 par value‚ 6% cumulative and nonparticipating preferred stock‚ and 1‚000‚000 shares of $1 par value common stock. It then Apr. 28 Issued 100‚000 shares of common stock at $23 per share. Jul. 16 Issued 6‚000 shares of preferred stock to The Venot Corporation for the following assets: equipment with a fair value of $76‚000; a warehouse with a fair value of $240‚000; and land with an appraised
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20-1. The campus pizzeria sells a single pizza for $12. If you order a second pizza‚ however‚ the pizzeria charges a price of only $5 for the additional pizza. Explain how an understanding of marginal utility helps to explain the pizzeria’s pricing strategy. 20-1-A. The pricing method that the pizzeria is using shows they understand how marginal utility works‚ specifically diminishing marginal utility. After hitting the level of satisfaction from the first pizza‚ a second pizza will not be quite
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University of Phoenix Material Week One Practice Problems Prepare a written response to the following questions. Chapter 1 12. Explain and give an example for each of the following types of variables: a. Equal interval: Variable in which the numbers stand for approximately equal amounts of what is being measured (Aron‚ 2013). b. Rank-order: Numeric variable in which the values are ranks‚ such as class standing or place finished in a race. Also called ordinal variable (Aron‚ 2013). c. Nominal:
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NAME December 14‚ 2014 Week 6 Practice Problem 1 XACC/290 General Journal Date Account Titles Debit Credit July 01 Cash 12‚000 Common Stock 12‚000 1 Equipment 8‚000 Accounts Payable 6‚000 Cash 2‚000 3 Cleaning Supplies 900 Accounts Payable 900 5 Prepaid Insurance 1‚800 Cash 1‚800 12 Accounts Receivable 3‚700 Service Revenue 3‚700 18 Accounts Payable 1‚500 Cash 1‚500 20 Salaries Expense
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for Problems and Cases Chapter 1 No check figures Chapter 2 Problem 2-13 Boxes for packaging: variable‚ direct Problem 2-14 Depreciation: fixed‚ manufacturing overhead‚ sunk Problem 2-15 (3) Cloth used: variable‚ direct Problem 2-16 (1) Cost of goods manufactured: $310‚000 Problem 2-17 No check figure Problem 2-18 (1) Cost of goods manufactured: $290‚000 Problem 2-19 (1) Total variable cost: $321‚000 Problem 2-20 Clay and glaze: variable‚ direct materials Problem 2-21
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each purchase of a large pizza at Tony’s Pizza‚ the customer receives a coupon that can be scratched to see if a prize will be awarded. The odds of winning a free soft drink are 1 in 10‚ and the odds of winning a free large pizza are 1 in 50. You plan to eat lunch tomorrow at Tony’s. What is the probability: 1. That you will win either a
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