esig Posted November 18, 2014 Posted November 18, 2014 I have a problem and I have the answer and the method in the book but when in put it in the calculator or excel or google I get the wrong answer The problem is An average family f four uses roughly 1200 liters of water per day. One liter =1000cm3 How much depth would a lake lose per year if it uniformly covered an area of 50 square km and supplied a local town with a population of 40000 people? Consider only population uses and neglegt evaporation and so on So I started my calculation and according to the book I did them right but my answer is not right. 40000 people(1200 L/d/4 people)(365 days/1 yr)(1000cm3 /1 L)(1km/10^5 cm) My calculation= 43 800 000 Books= 4.4*10^-3 I maybe thought that mine was in cm since the book gives it answer in km but if I did my conversion right I have 438 km and the books is 0.0044 km Can somebody tell what it is I am doing wrong? I took a screen shot of the books solution
imatfaal Posted November 18, 2014 Posted November 18, 2014 I have a problem and I have the answer and the method in the book but when in put it in the calculator or excel or google I get the wrong answer The problem is An average family f four uses roughly 1200 liters of water per day. One liter =1000cm3 How much depth would a lake lose per year if it uniformly covered an area of 50 square km and supplied a local town with a population of 40000 people? Consider only population uses and neglegt evaporation and so on So I started my calculation and according to the book I did them right but my answer is not right. 40000 people(1200 L/d/4 people)(365 days/1 yr)(1000cm3 /1 L)(1km/10^5 cm) My calculation= 43 800 000 Books= 4.4*10^-3 I maybe thought that mine was in cm since the book gives it answer in km but if I did my conversion right I have 438 km and the books is 0.0044 km Can somebody tell what it is I am doing wrong? I took a screen shot of the books solution 42.png You have converted cm to km (ie factor of 100,000) - to convert cm^3 to km^3 you need to cube the conversion factor as well and when you do the second part with the lake remember than km^2 to cm^2 is a conversion factor that must be treated similarly (although not identical)
esig Posted November 18, 2014 Author Posted November 18, 2014 I am sorry but english is not my first language, what do you mean by that I need to cube the conversion factor as well?
imatfaal Posted November 18, 2014 Posted November 18, 2014 Think about it first with converting cm to m - the numbers are easier. There are one hundred centimetres in a metre. How many cm^2 are there in a m^2? and in a m^3? By the way for those not English native speakers - cube in these circumstances means raise to the power of three.
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