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Parents Pricing Home GCSE Edexcel Maths Direct & Inverse Proportion Karina has 4 tanks on her tractor
Karina has 4 tanks on her tractor - Edexcel - GCSE Maths - Question 4 - 2022 - Paper 3 Question 4
View full question Karina has 4 tanks on her tractor.
Each tank is a cylinder with diameter 80 cm and height 160 cm.
The 4 tanks are to be filled completely with a mixture of fertilis... show full transcript
View marking scheme Worked Solution & Example Answer:Karina has 4 tanks on her tractor - Edexcel - GCSE Maths - Question 4 - 2022 - Paper 3
Calculate the volume of one tank Only available for registered users.
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To determine the volume of one tank, we will use the formula for the volume of a cylinder:
V = e x t B a s e A r e a i m e s e x t H e i g h t V = ext{Base Area} imes ext{Height} V = e x t B a se A re a im ese x t He i g h t
The base area for a cylinder is given by:
ext{Base Area} = rac{1}{4} imes ext{Diameter}^2 imes rac{ ext{ ext{π}}}{4}
Substituting values:
Diameter = 80 cm
Height = 160 cm
V = rac{1}{4} imes (80)^2 imes 160
V = rac{1}{4} imes 6400 imes 160
V = 1024000 e x t c m 3 V = 1024000 ext{ cm}^3 V = 1024000 e x t c m 3
Now, since there are 4 tanks, the total volume will be:
V t o t a l = 4 i m e s V = 4 i m e s 1024000 = 4096000 e x t c m 3 V_{total} = 4 imes V = 4 imes 1024000 = 4096000 ext{ cm}^3 V t o t a l = 4 im es V = 4 im es 1024000 = 4096000 e x t c m 3
Determine the amount of fertiliser needed Only available for registered users.
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Given the ratio of fertiliser to water is 1:100, the total parts of the mixture is 1 + 100 = 101 parts. Thus, for the mixture:
Fertiliser = 1 part
Water = 100 parts
For every litre of fertiliser, there are 100 litres of water. So, we can express the amount of fertiliser needed for the total volume of tanks.
Let V be the total volume needed. Since 1 litre = 1000 cm³:
The volume of one part (fertiliser):
ext{Volume of fertiliser} = rac{V_{total}}{101}
Using the total volume, we find:
ext{Volume of fertiliser} = rac{4096000}{101} \ ext{cm}^3
≈ 40537.62 cm 3 \approx 40537.62 \text{ cm}^3 ≈ 40537.62 cm 3
Check if Karina has enough fertiliser Only available for registered users.
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Karina has 32 litres of fertiliser:
In cm³, this is:
32 e x t l i t r e s = 32 i m e s 1000 = 32000 e x t c m 3 32 ext{ litres} = 32 imes 1000 = 32000 ext{ cm}^3 32 e x t l i t res = 32 im es 1000 = 32000 e x t c m 3
Now, we compare this with the required amount:
Required fertiliser = 40537.62 cm³
Available fertiliser = 32000 cm³
Since 32000 cm³ is less than the required 40537.62 cm³, Karina does not have enough fertiliser for the 4 tanks.
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