CHAPTER 1 ELECTRICAL FORMULAS OHM’S LAW/POWER FORMULAS R x I2 E x I P R P E E2 RxI R P I P x R E I P I E R E R P I2 E2 P P = Power = Watts R = Resistance = Ohms I = Current = Amperes E = Force = Volts 1-1 OHM’S LAW DIAGRAM AND FORMULAS E I E = I x R I = E ÷ R R = E ÷ I R Voltage = Current x Resistance Current = Voltage ÷ Resistance Resistance = Voltage ÷ Current POWER DIAGRAM AND FORMULAS P E I = P ÷ E E = P ÷ I P = I x E I Current = Power ÷ Voltage
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Dawn Raid on its shares early in 1988 by Jacobs Suchard‚ the Swiss confectionery company. This seemed a good moment to turn previous collaboration discussions with Nestle into a full-blown White Knight takeover. However‚ the discussions were very friendly: complementarity in products was clearly in evidence‚ and Nestle saw much synergy through R and D‚ products‚ administration and sales force‚ leading to economies of scale. It is a Case Study of an eminently sensible integration of
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AKS Review: Moles AKS Correlation 9c. Apply concepts of the mole and Avogadro’s number to conceptualize and calculate: -empirical/molecular formulas -mass‚ moles‚ and molecules relationships In all calculations that follow‚ SHOW ALL WORK AND USE SIGNIFICANT FIGURES. 1. Write Avogadro’s number in standard and in scientific notation. 2. What is a mole? 3. (a) In your own words‚ what is molar mass? (b) Find the molar mass of the following: Fe
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PMP® Formula Pocket Guide Print it - Fold it - Study wherever you go. Earned Value CV = EV - AC CPI = EV / AC SV = EV - PV SPI = EV / PV EAC ‘no variances’ = BAC / CPI EAC ‘fundamentally flawed’ = AC + ETC EAC ‘atypical’ = AC + BAC - EV EAC ‘typical’ = AC + ((BAC - EV) / CPI) ETC = EAC - AC ETC ‘atypical’ = BAC - EV ETC ‘typical’ = (BAC - EV) / CPI ETC ‘flawed’ = new estimate Percent Complete = EV / BAC * 100 VAC = BAC - EAC EV = % complete * BAC Mathematical Basics Average (Mean) = Sum
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Nestle is one of the world’s largest global food companies. It has over 500 factories in over 70 countries‚ and sells its products in approximately 200 nations. Only 1% of sales and 3% of employees are located in its home country‚ Switzerland. Having reached the limits of growth and profitable penetration in most Western markets‚ Nestle turned its attention to emerging markets in Eastern Europe‚ Asia‚ and Latin America for growth. Many of these countries are relatively poor‚ but the economies are
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Slovin’s Formula Sampling Techniques * By Steph Ellen‚ eHow Contributor * When it is not possible to study an entire population (such as the population of the United States)‚ a smaller sample is taken using a random sampling technique. Slovin’s formula allows a researcher to sample the population with a desired degree of accuracy. It gives the researcher an idea of how large his sample size needs to be to ensure a reasonable accuracy of results. * When to Use Slovin’s Formula * If
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required by the study Determine sample size ▪ Slovin Formula: ▪ n = N__ ▪ 1+NE² ▪ Where: n = sample size ▪ N = population size E = margin of error * desired Example: What should be the representative sample size if the population from which the sample will be taken is 10‚000 and the desired margin of error is 2%? Solution: To determine the sample size‚ use the formula; n = ___N__ 1+NE² n =
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forced damped transverse vibration of a beam and verify Dunkerley’s empirical formula. According to Dunkerley’s empirical formula‚ 1f2=1fb2+1fω2 where f referring to the natural frequency of heavy beam with central load fb referring to the natural frequency of heavy beam only fω referring to the natural frequency of light beam with central load M By using the results of light damping‚ Dunkerley’s empirical formula would be studied and verified by comparing the calculated resonant frequency
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The Hubbart Formula Where would a hotel manager start in determining the fair price for a guest room? What is a fair value? This question has daunted innkeepers from the beginning. Charge rates too high‚ and no one will stay with you. Setting rates too low‚ and the owner makes less money. For many years in the beginning of the modern hotel era‚ hotel managers simply guessed. As unscientific as this approach sounds‚ it did work to an extent. After a hotel has been in business
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Average formula: Let a1‚a2‚a3‚......‚an be a set of numbers‚ average = (a1 + a2 + a3‚+......+ an)/n Fractions formulas: Converting a mixed number to an improper fraction: Converting an improper fraction to a mixed number: Formula for a proportion: In a proportion‚ the product of the extremes (ad) equal the product of the means(bc)‚ Thus‚ ad = bc Percent: Percent to fraction: x% = x/100 Percentage formula: Rate/100
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