![hschuman01osrzvf](/avatars/12872.jpg)
hschuman01osrzvf
29.06.2019 •
Mathematics
1. describe the effect the given transformation will have on the parent function (in words).
2. write the equation of the transformed function.
the parent function you will use for every problems is: f(x)=x .
given transformation: y=f(x+1)
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- P Philosophy Agnosticism: Opinion or Belief?...
- C Computers and Internet How to Calibrate Your Monitor: Useful Tips and Recommendations...
- H Health and Medicine Hangover: How to Get Rid of It Quickly?...
- A Auto and Moto How to Start a Diesel Engine in Cold Weather?...
- A Auto and Moto Which alarm system to choose?...
- P Photography and Videography What is lens calibration and why is it needed?...
- S Science and Technology How to Choose a Picture Frame: Tips and Recommendations...
- P Photography and Videography Understanding HDR: How It Works and Why You Need It...
- P Photography and Videography How to Choose the Perfect Photo Paper for Your Images?...
- C Computers and Internet How to Choose an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) for Your Computer: Expert Tips...
Answers on questions: Mathematics
- M Mathematics What is 380 decreased by 18%...
- M Mathematics Solve this equation 3p-6 21...
- M Mathematics What is the square root of 169...
- M Mathematics What is 31/6 as a mixed number...
- M Mathematics The number of swimmers at a city pool on Monday was twice the number who were there on Tuesday. The number at the pool on Wednesday was 11 fewer than 3 times the number on Tuesday....
- M Mathematics I dont want answers i want a explanation on how you do this like how did they get 2/10 on the second one?...
- M Mathematics Which conflict reaction involves a choice of whether or not to do something when part of the situation is attractive but the other is not? approach avoidance multiple approach...
- M Mathematics To make a shade of paint called jasper green, mix 4 quarts of green paint with 53 cups of black paint. Select an equation that calculates how quarts of green paint, , are mixed...
- M Mathematics Last year you spent 210 on school clothes. You spent 37.5 of this amount on shirts. How much did you spend on shirts?...
- M Mathematics Four more than .3 times a number is -26...
Ответ:
I was pleased with Robert Whiteford's affection for our obelisk (which was a gift to New York City, by the way, not to the nation), but disturbed over the canard about ''the damage done in less than 100 years'' (''Disappearing Needle,'' letter, Dec. 16).
This has often been asserted by thoughtless geologists and journalists (a writer in Smithsonian magazine declared that the pair of obelisks left Egypt, one for New York and its mate for London, ''in mint condition''). In 1965, however, a temperate writer stated, ''the disastrous disintegration rate of granite in city atmosphere, as exemplified by Cleopatra's Needle, is a myth,'' adding, ''It is therefore hoped that the obelisk will be eliminated from textbooks of physical geology as a 'good example of weathering in cities.' ''
Historically, the New York obelisk, which Napoleon had intended for France when he saw it, was subsequently refused because of poor condition, in favor of the well-preserved Luxor shaft removed to Paris in 1836. The London twin to New York was rejected in 1849 for the same reason. In the 19th century there were observations of native vendors peddling granite chips from the obelisk at the site in Alexandria. In New York, in 1891, it was observed of the Needle's west face that ''the abrasion caused by the sand of the Libyan desert has effaced almost every hieroglyph on this side of the obelisk.''
Conservation began early. The tip was said to have been repaired in Alexandria circa 1880. During re-erection in New York in 1881, some structural repairs were made (note replacements in the limestone foundation steps; the bronze crabs were replacements forged at the Brooklyn Navy Yard). By 1885, 780 pounds of granite scale were removed from the shaft, which was then treated with paraffin. As for the resistance of such granite in New York's climate, there are miles of curbstone regularly polluted by exhausts and urine, and exterior building walls (e.g., the Museum of Natural History), in good condition.
Continue reading the main story
Meanwhile, the obelisk, in Central Park, on its knoll, amid the trees, behind the sheltering wall of the museum, away from the motor traffic, appears to be ideally sited; when conditions become severe, it will also be time to put Trinity Church, the Public Library and City Hall under glass.
Incidentally, the literature, considerable and thorough (woodcut illustrations of the hieroglyphs were published in the 1650's), is available in the public library. FRED BRAUEN Jackson Heights, Queens, Dec. 16, 1986