Chapter 1 Managerial Accounting and Cost Concepts Solutions to Questions 1-1 The three major elements of product costs in a manufacturing company are direct materials‚ direct labor‚ and manufacturing overhead. 1-2 a. Direct materials are an integral part of a finished product and their costs can be conveniently traced to it. b. Indirect materials are generally small items of material such as glue and nails. They may be an integral part of a finished product but their costs can be
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Last updated: August 20‚ 2007 This is a solution manual for the two-volume textbook Stochastic calculus for finance‚ by Steven Shreve. If you have any comments or find any typos/errors‚ please email me at yz44@cornell.edu. The current version omits the following problems. Volume I: 1.5‚ 3.3‚ 3.4‚ 5.7; Volume II: 3.9‚ 7.1‚ 7.2‚ 7.5–7.9‚ 10.8‚ 10.9‚ 10.10. Acknowledgment I thank Hua Li (a graduate student at Brown University) for reading through this solution manual and communicating to me several mistakes/typos
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SOLUTION MANUAL CHAPTER 7 Borgnakke and Sonntag CONTENT CHAPTER 7 SUBSECTION In-Text concept questions Concept problems Heat engines and refrigerators Second law and processes Carnot cycles and absolute temperature Finite ∆T heat transfer Ideal gas Carnot cycles review problems PROB NO. a-g 1-14 15-36 37-43 44-77 78-91 92-95 96-113 Excerpts from this work may be reproduced by instructors for distribution on a not-for-profit basis for testing or instructional purposes
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Business and Econ Statistics solutions CHAPTER 1 The Changing Role of Managerial Accounting in a Dynamic Business Environment ANSWERS TO REVIEW QUESTIONS 1-1 The explosion in e-commerce will affect managerial accounting in significant ways. One effect will be a drastic reduction in paper work. Millions of transactions between businesses will be conducted electronically with no hard-copy documentation. Along with this method of communicating for business transactions comes the very
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Solutions to Problems and Exercises TABLE OF CONTENTS * Chapter 1 1 Concepts for Analysis 1-5 1 Concepts for Analysis 1-6 2 Concepts for Analysis 1-10 3 Concepts for Analysis 1-11 3 * Chapter 2 4 Brief Exercise 2-3 4 Brief Exercise 2-4 4 Brief Exercise 2-5 4 Exercise 2-3 5 * Chapter 3 6 Exercise 3-6 6 Exercise 3-9 6 Exercise 3-11 8 Exercise 3-14 10 Exercise 3-15 10 Exercise 3-16 10 * chapter 4 12 Exercise 4-2 12 Exercise 4-4 13 Exercise 4-5 16 Exercise 4-12 17
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Chapter 4 Receivables and Related Revenues MULTIPLE CHOICE – THEORY 1. D 6. D 2. C 7. B 3. C 8. B 4. B 9. A Problem 1 (Fontana Blue) a. Cost of Sales Inventory 20‚000 b. Cost of Sales Inventory 18‚000 18‚000 c. No adjustment d. Sales 20‚000 40‚000 Accounts Receivable e. 40‚000 Sales 60‚000 Accounts Receivable 60‚000 Inventory 33‚600 Cost of Sales f. 33‚600 Sales 120‚000 Accounts Receivable g. 120‚000
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CHAPTER 17 SPONTANEITY‚ ENTROPY‚ AND FREE ENERGY Questions 11. Living organisms need an external source of energy to carry out these processes. Green plants use the energy from sunlight to produce glucose from carbon dioxide and water by photosynthesis. In the human body‚ the energy released from the metabolism of glucose helps drive the synthesis of proteins. For all processes combined‚ ∆Suniv must be greater than zero (the second law). 12. Dispersion increases the entropy of the universe because
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Question 1: Define accounting. Answer : Accounting is a process of identifying the events of financial nature‚ recording them in Journal‚ classifying in their respective ledgers‚ summarising them in Profit and Loss Account and Balance Sheet and communicating the results to the users of such information‚ viz. owner/s‚ government‚ creditors‚ investors etc. According to the American Institute of Certified Accountants‚ 1941‚ “Accounting is an art of recording‚ classifying and summarising in a significant
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7th Edition Chapter Two Solutions 10 March 2006 1. (a) 12 μs (b) 750 mJ (c) 1.13 kΩ (d) 3.5 Gbits (e) 6.5 nm (f) 13.56 MHz (g) 39 pA (h) 49 kΩ (i) 11.73 pA PROPRIETARY MATERIAL. © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies‚ Inc. Limited distribution permitted only to teachers and educators for course preparation. If you are a student using this Manual‚ you are using it without permission. Engineering Circuit Analysis‚ 7th Edition Chapter Two Solutions 10 March 2006 2. (a)
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COMPREHENSIVE CASE SOLUTIONS – CHAPTERS 12 - 21 NOTE: The cases related to these solutions are posted on our website www.mcgrawhill.ca/olc/buckwold. They are not printed in the text. Solution to COMPREHENSIVE CASE ONE Seacourt Restaurants All of the issues in this case have been examined in depth in problems and cases of previous chapters and therefore the following solution briefly refers to the main issues of each segment. Where applicable‚ tax rates are assumed to be: Individual Corporation
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