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CHAPTER 7 Decimals, Ratio, Proportion, and Percent 7.1. Decimals 7.2. Operations with Decimals Addition Example. 3.71 + 13.809 (1) Using fractions: 3.71 + 13.809 = 371 13, 809 3710 13, 809 17, 519 + = + = = 17.519 100 1000 1000 1000 1000 (2) Decimal approach – align the decimal points, add the numbers in columns as if they were whole numbers, and insert a decimal in the answer immediately beneath the decial points of the numbers being added. 3.71 3.710 +13.809 +13.809 or 17.519 17.519 Subtraction Example. 13.809 3.71 (1) Using fractions: 13.809 3.71 = 13, 809 1000 371 13, 809 = 100 1000 1 3710 10, 099 = = 10.099 1000 1000 2 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT (2) Decimal approach – as with addition. 13.809 3.71 or 10.099 Example. 14.3 13.809 3.710 17.519 7.961 14.3 7.961 =) 14.300 7.961 6.339 Multiplication Example. 7.3 ⇥ 11.41 (1) Estimate: 7 ⇥ 11 = 77 (2) Using fractions: 73 1141 73 · 1141 83, 293 ⇥ = = = 83.293 10 100 10 · 100 1000 Note that the location of the decimal matches the estimate. 7.3 ⇥ 11.41 = 7.2. OPERATIONS WITH DECIMALS 3 (3) Decimal approach – multiply as though without decimal points, and then insert a decimal point in the answer so that the number of digits to the right of the decimal in the answer equals the sum of the number of digits to the right of the decimal points in the numbers being multiplied. 7.3 ⇥ 11.41 = 11.41 ⇥ 7.3 Again, the placement of the decimal point makes sense in view of the estimate. Example. 421.2 ⇥ .0076 Estimate: 400 ⇥ .01 = 400 ⇥ 1 =4 100 The placement of the decimal point corresponds with the estimate. 4 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Division: Example. 6.5 ÷ 0.026 (1) Estimate: 6 ÷ .03 = 6 ÷ 3 100 600 =6⇥ = = 200 100 3 3 (2) Using fractions: 6.5 ÷ 0.026 = 65 26 6500 26 6500 ÷ = ÷ = = 250 10 1000 1000 1000 26 (3) Decimal approach – replace the original problem by an equivalent problem where the divisor is a whole number Example. 6.5 ÷ 0.026 (1) Estimate: 6 ÷ .03 = 6 ÷ 3 100 600 =6⇥ = = 200 100 3 3 (2) Using fractions: 6.5 ÷ 0.026 = 65 26 6500 26 6500 ÷ = ÷ = = 250 10 1000 1000 1000 26 7.2. OPERATIONS WITH DECIMALS 5 (3) Decimal approach – replace the original problem by an equivalent problem where the divisor is a whole number Example. 1470.3838 ÷ 26.57 6 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Repeating Decimals (1) Fractions in simplified form with only 2’s and 5’s as prime factors in the denominator convert to terminating decimals. Example. Example. 7.2. OPERATIONS WITH DECIMALS 7 (2) Fractions in simplified form with factors other than 2 and 5 in the denominator convert to repeating decimals. 5 Example. 12 5 = .4166 · · · = .416 with 6 indicating the 6 repeats indefinitely. 12 8 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Example. 3 11 3 = 0.27. The “27” is called the repetend. Decimals with a repetend are 11 called repeating decimnals. The number of digits in the repetend is the period of the decimal. Terminating decimals are decimals with a repetend of 0, e.g., 0.3 = 0.30. 7.2. OPERATIONS WITH DECIMALS 9 Every fraction can be written as a repeating decimal. Ts see why this is so, 5 consider . In dividing by 7, there are 7 possible remainders, 0 through 6. Thus 7 a remainder must repeat by the 7th division: 5 Example. 7 5 = 0.714285 7 Theorem (Fractions with Repeating, Nonterminating Decimal Represena a tations). Let be a fraction in simplest form. Then has a repeating b b decimal representation that does not terminate if and only if b has a prime factor other than 2 or 5. 10 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Example. Changing a repeating decimal into a fraction. 18.634 has a period of 3, so we use 103 = 1000. Let n = 18.634. Then 1000n = 18634.634. 1000n = 18634.634634 · · · n= 18.634634 · · · 999n = 18616 18616 n= 999 Example. Change .439 to a fraction. .439 has a period of 1, so we use 101 = 10. Let n = .439. Then 10n = .439. 10n = 4.39999 · · · n = .43999 · · · 9n = 3.96 3.96 396 n= = = 9 900 So .439 = .44 = .440. 44 11 = 100 25 |{z} Notice n = .44 We have two decimal numerals for the same number. When 9 repeats, you cvan drop the repetend and increase the preivious digit by 1 to get a terminating decimal. Theorem. Every fraction has a repeating decimal representation, and every repeating decimal has a fraction representation. 7.3. RATIO AND PROPORTION 11 7.3. Ratio and Proportion Example. On a given farm, the ratio of cattle to hogs is 7 : 4. (This is read 7 to 4.). What this means: 1) For every 7 cattle, there are 4 hogs. 2) For every 4 hogs, there are 7 cattle. 3) Assuming there are no other types of livestock on the farm: 7 a) of the livestock are cattle. 11 4 a) of the livestock are hogs. 11 7 4)There are as many cattle as hogs. 4 4 5) There are as many hogs as cattle. 7 6) Again assuming no other types of livestock: a) 7 of 11 livestock are cattle. a) 4 of 11 livestock are hogs. Definition. A ratio is an ordered pair of numbers, written a : b, with b 6= 0. Note. 1) Ratios allow us to compare the relative sizes of 2 quantities. a 2) The ratio a : b can also be represented by the fraction . b 12 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT 3) Ratios can involve any real numbers: Example. 3.5 : 1 or 3.5 , 1 7 3 7/2 : or , 2 4 3/4 p 2 : ⇡ or p 2 ⇡ 4) Ratios can be used to express 3 typres of comparisons: a) part-to-part A cattle to hog ratio of 7 : 4. b) part-to-whole A hog to livestock ratio of 4 : 11. c) whole-to-part Livestock to cattle ratio of 11 : 7. Example. Suppose our farm has 420 cattle. How many hogs are there? Solution. The cattle can be broken up into 60 groups of 7 (420 ÷ 7). there would then be 60 corresponding groups of 4 hogs each, or 60 · 4 = 240 hogs. ⇤ Definition (Equality of Ratios). a c a c Let and be any two ratios. Then = if and only if ad = bc. b d b d Note. 1) a and d are called the extremes and b and c are called the means “a : b| {z = }c : d if and only if ad = bc.” | means {z } extremes “Two ratios are equal if and only if the product of the extremes equals the product of the means.” an a 2) Just as with fractions, if n 6= 0, = or an : bn = a : b. bn b 7.3. RATIO AND PROPORTION 13 Definition. A proportion is a statement that 2 ratios are equal. Example. Write a fraction in simplest form that is equivalent to the ratio 39 : 91. 39 13 · 3 3 39 : 91 = = = 91 13 · 7 7 Example. Are the ratios 7 : 12 and 36 : 60 equal?. Extremes: 7 · 60 = 420 The ratios are not equal. Means: 12 · 36 = 432 Example. B 2 14 Solve for the unknown in the proportion = . 8 18 ⇣ 1⌘ 1 18B = 8·2 =) 18B = 8 2+ =) 18B = 16+2 =) 18B = 18 =) B = 1 4 4 Example. 3x 12 x Solve for the unknown in the proportion = . 4 6 18x = 4(12 x) =) 18x = 48 4x =) 22x = 48 =) x = Example. Solve the follwing proportions mentally: 1) 26 miles for 6 hours is equal to for 24 hours. 104 48 24 = 22 11 14 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT 2) 750 people for each 12 square miles is equal to square miles. people for each 16 1000 Example. If one inch on a map represents 35 miles and two cities are 1000 miles apart, how many inches apart would the be on the map? Use a table: scale actual inches 1 x miles 35 1000 1 x = (notice how the unit align). 35 1000 35x = 1000 1000 200 4 x= = = 28 ⇡ 28.57 35 7 7 Example. We have A softball pitcher has given up 18 earned runs in 39 innings. How many earned runs does she give up per seven-inning game (ERA) season game earned runs 18 x innings 39 7 18 x = 39 7 39x = 126 126 42 x= = ⇡ 3.23 39 13 7.4. PERCENT 15 7.4. Percent Percent means per hundred and % is used to represent percent. 60 60 percent = 60% = = .60 100 53 530 percent = 530% = = 5.30 100 In general, n n% = (definition). 100 Conversions: (1) Percents to fractions – use the definition Example. 37% = 37 100 (2) Percents to decimals – go percent to fraction to decimal Example. 67% = 67 = .67 100 Shortcut – drop % sign and move the dcimal two places to the left. Example. 54% = .54 5% = .05 372% = 3.72 (3) Decimals to percents – reverse the shortcut of step (2) (move the decimal two places to the right and add the % sign. 16 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Example. .73 = 73% 2.17 = 217% .235 = 23.5% (4) Fractions to percents – go fraction to decimal to percent. Note. fractions with terminating decimals (denominator only has 2’s and 5’s as factors) can be expressed as a fraction with a denominator of 100. Example. 5 625 62.5 = = = .625 = 62.5% 8 1000 100 3 ⇡ (long division) .429 = 42.9% 7 Common Equivalents Percent Fraction 1 5% 20 10% 1 10 20% 1 5 25% 1 4 33 13 % 1 3 50% 1 2 66 23 % 2 3 75% 3 4 7.4. PERCENT Example. Find mentally: 196 is 200% of . 2x = 196 =) x = 25% of 244= 40 is . 1 ⇥ 196 = 98 2 1 ⇥ 244 = 61 4 % of 32. 40 5 1 = = 1 + = 100% + 25% = 125% 32 4 4 731 is 50% of . 1 x = 731 =) x = 2 ⇥ 731 = 1462 2 166 23 % of 300 is . 2 2 2 166 % = 100% + 66 % = 1 + 3 3 3 ⇣ ⌘ 2 1 + 300 = 300 + 200 = 500 3 Find 15% of 40. Find 300% of 120. Find 33 13 % of 210. 1 1 15% = 10% + 5% = + 10 20 ⇣1 ⌘ 1 + 40 = 4 + 2 = 6 10 20 2 ⇥ 120 = 240 1 ⇥ 210 = 70 3 17 18 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Example. Estimate mentally: 21% of 34. 11.2% of 431. 1 of 35 = 7 5 1 ⌘ (10 + 1)% = + of 430 = 43 + 4 = 47 10 100 Solving Percent Problems ⇣1 (1) Grid approach. Example. A car was purchased for $14,000 with a 30% down payment. How much was the down payment? Let the grid below represent the total cost of $14,000. Since the down payment is 30%, 30 of 100 squares are marked. Each square represents 14, 000 = 140 dollars (1% of $14,000). 100 Thus 30 squares represent 30% of $14,000 or 30 ⇥ $140 = $4200. 7.4. PERCENT 19 (2) Proportion approach – since percents can be written as a ratio. Example. A volleyball team wins 105 games, which is 70% of the games played. How many games were played? percent actual wins 70 105 games 100 x 70 105 = =) 70x = 10, 500 =) x = 150 games played 100 x Example. If Frank saves $28 of his $240 weekly salary, what percent does he save? actual percent saved 28 x salary 240 100 28 x 2800 35 = =) 240x = 2800 =) x = = 240 100 240 3 Frank saves 11 23 %. (3) Equation approach (x is unknown; p, n, and a are fixed numbers). Translation of Problem ⇣ Equation p ⌘ (a) p% of n is x n=x 100 ⇣ p ⌘ (b) p% of x is a x=a 100 ⇣ x ⌘ (c) x% of n is a n=a 100 20 7. DECIMALS, RATIO, PROPORTION, AND PERCENT Example. Sue is paid $315.00 a week plus a 6% comission on sales. Find her weekly earnings if the sales for the week are $575.00. 6 Translation (a): x = · 575 = 34.5. 100 Salary = $315.00 + $34.50 = $349.50. Example. A department store marked down all summer clothing 25%. The following week, remaining items were marked down 15% o↵ the sale price. When John bought 2 tank tops, he presented a coupon that gave him an additional 20% o↵. What percent of the original price did John save? solution. x = percent saved, P = original price Translation (c): x P =P 100 =P =P =P x P =P 100 x = .49 100 x = 49% price John paid 80 · (2nd markdown) 100 i 80 h 85 · · (1st markdown) 100 100 80 h 85 ⇣ 75 ⌘i · · P 100 100 100 .51P = .49P ⇤