In purchasing food for a political rally, you erroneously order shucked medium-size Pacific oysters (which come 8 to 12 per U.S. pint) instead of shucked medium-size Atlantic oysters (which come 26 to 38 per U.S. pint). The filled oyster container shipped to you has the interior measure of1.0m×12cm×20cm,and a U.S. pint is equivalent to 0.4732 liter . By how many oysters is the order short of your anticipated count?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The order is roughly short of 700-1500 oysters from the anticipated count

Step by step solution

01

Given data

Dimensions of the filled oyster container are1.0m×12cm×20cm

One U.S. pint is equivalent to 0.4732 liter.

VolumeofContainer=24000cm3=24liters

02

Conversion of quantities into required units.

To find the range of shortage, take the difference between the smallest value from the first range and the largest value from the second and then the difference between the largest value from the first range and the smallest value of the second range.

03

Determination of the range

The volume of the container is,

V=1.0m×100cm1m×12cm×20cm=24000cm3

The conversion of pint to liter is as below.

1 pint =0.4732 liter

So,

24liter=24liters×1USpint0.4732liters=50.72U.S.Pints

1U.S.pint=8-12ParcificOysterIf1U.Spint=8parcificOyster.Then,50.72USpints=50.72USpints×8PacificOyster1USPint=405.76ParcificOyster406ParcificOyster

If1U.SPint=12PacificOyster,then50.72USpints=5.72USpints×12PacificOyster1USPint=608.64PacificOyster609pacificOyster

So, range of the pacific oyster is 406-609 .

Now, 1pint=26-38AtlanticOyster

If 1 U.S pint=26 Atlantic Oyster,then,

role="math" localid="1657702043344" 50.72USpints=50.72USpints×26AtlanticOyster1USPint=1318.72AtlanticOyster1319AtlanticOyster

If 1 U.S pint=38 Atlantic Oyster , then,

50.72USpints=50.72USpints×38AtlanticOyster1USPint=1927.36AtlanticOyster1927AtlanticOyster

So, range of the Atlantic Oyster is 1319-1927.

To find the range of shortage, take the differencebetween the smallestvaluefrom the firstrange and the largest value from the second and then the differencebetween the largestvalue from the first range and the smallest value of the second range.

This would give1927-406=15211500and1319-609=710700

Thus, the shortage of the oyster would be in the range of (700-1500) .

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

An old English cookbook carries this recipe for cream of nettle soup: “Boil stock of the following amount: 1 breakfastcup plus 1 teacup plus 6 tablespoons plus 1 dessertspoon. Using gloves, separate nettle tops until you have 0.5 quart; add the tops to the boiling stock. Add 1 tablespoon of cooked rice and 1 saltspoon of salt. Simmer for 15 min.” The following table gives some of the conversions among old (premetric) British measures and among common (still premetric) U.S. measures. (These measures just scream for metrication.) For liquid measures, 1 British teaspoon = 1 U.S. teaspoon. For dry measures, 1 British teaspoon = 2 U.S. teaspoons and 1 British quart =1 U.S. quart. In U.S. measures, how much (a) stock, (b) nettle tops, (c) rice, and (d) salt are required in the recipe?

Old British Measures

U.S. Measures

teaspoon = 2 saltspoons

tablespoon = 3 teaspoons

dessertspoon = 2 teaspoons

half cup = 8 tablespoons

tablespoon = 2 dessertspoons

cup = 2 half cups

teacup = 8 tablespoons


breakfastcup = 2 teacups


Question: (a) Assuming that water has a density of exactly 1 gm/cm3, find the mass of one cubic meter of water in kilograms. (b) Suppose that it takes 10.0 h to drain a container of 5700 m3of water. What is the “mass flow rate,” in kilograms per second, of water from the container?

Question: The micrometer (1μm) is often called the micron. (a) How many microns make up 1km ? (b) What fraction of a centimeter equals (1μm)? (c) How many microns are in 1.0 yd ?

Can the sum of the magnitudes of two vectors ever be equal to the magnitude of the sum of the same two vectors? If no, why not? If yes, when?

What is the magnitude of the acceleration of a sprinter running at10 m/s when rounding a turn of radius 25 m?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free