Equations:
Lc + Lf = 600 and Lc/Lf = 0.05
Tc + Tf = 60 and Tc/Tf = 0.20
(where Lc, for example, is the same as X...just a single variable...not L times c)
After I tried solving them, I got the answers of
Lc= 28.57
Lf = 571.42
Tf = 10
Tc = 50
However, my prof told me that his figures for X and Y were even, and that all my numbers were wrong. Can anyone shed some light on where I'm going wrong?
This is part of the Rybczynski Box Diagram I'm doing for my economics class. You can see the graph here if it helps:
>> http://www.plu.edu/~331f05/theory/rybczynski-box.html
Starting from the top (and going clockwise), the intercepts on the graph (with the axies) are Lf, Tf, Lc and Tc.
2006-10-04
04:57:59
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6 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Mathematics