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In an earlier lesson, you saw the equation , which relates the number of vertices, faces, and edges in a Platonic solid.
Write an equation that makes it easier to find the number of vertices in each of the Platonic solids described:
A Buckminsterfullerene (also called a “Buckyball”) is a polyhedron with 60 vertices. It is not a Platonic solid, but the numbers of faces, edges, and vertices are related the same way as those in a Platonic solid.
Write an equation that makes it easier to find the number of faces that a Buckyball has if we know how many edges it has.
An automobile manufacturer is preparing a shipment of cars and trucks on a cargo ship that can carry 21,600 tons.
The cars weigh 3.6 tons each, and the trucks weigh 7.5 tons each.
For one shipment, trucks are loaded first, and cars are loaded afterward. (Even though trucks are bulkier than cars, a shipment can consist of all trucks as long as it is within the weight limit.)
Find the number of cars that can be shipped if the cargo already has:
For a different shipment, cars are loaded first, and then trucks are loaded afterward.
The Department of Streets of a city has a budget of \$1,962,800 for resurfacing roads and hiring additional workers this year.
The cost of resurfacing a mile of 2-lane road is estimated at \$84,000. The average starting salary of a worker in the department is \$36,000 a year.
Solving for a variable is an efficient way to find out the values that meet the constraints in a situation. Here is an example.
An elevator has a capacity of 3,000 pounds and is being loaded with boxes of two sizes—small and large. A small box weighs 60 pounds, and a large box weighs 150 pounds.
Let be the number of small boxes and be the number of large boxes. To represent the combination of small and large boxes that fill the elevator to capacity, we can write:
If there are 10 large boxes already, how many small boxes can we load onto the elevator so that it fills it to capacity? What if there are 16 large boxes?
In each case, we can substitute 10 or 16 for and perform acceptable moves to solve the equation. Or, we can first solve for :
This equation allows us to easily find the number of small boxes, , that can be loaded, by substituting any number of large boxes for .
Now suppose we first load the elevator with small boxes, say, 30 or 42, and want to know how many large boxes can be added for the elevator to reach its capacity.
We can substitute 30 or 42 for in the original equation and solve it. Or, we can first solve for :
Now, for any value of , we can quickly find by evaluating the expression on the right side of the equal sign.
Solving for a variable—before substituting any known values—can make it easier to test different values of one variable and see how they affect the other variable. It can save us the trouble of doing the same calculation over and over.