ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

Using the Multiplicative Inverse to Solve Equations 3823 Views


Share It!


Description:

The multiplicative inverse sounds like a weird sci-fi concept, but it's really just multiplying a fraction by its reciprocal—otherwise known as the same fraction flipped upside down. It's like an roller coaster ride for fractions! Just make sure they don't eat too much cotton candy beforehand.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Using Multiplicative Inverse to Solve Equations, a la Shmoop.

00:13

Whenever there's a snowstorm, hailstorm, windstorm, sandstorm, any kind of storm...

00:17

... your parents go a little crazy stocking up on canned goods.

00:21

Right now, the stack of cans in the basement is about eleven feet high...

00:27

Your basement's pretty roomy. Its ceiling is twenty feet high. You could play basketball

00:30

down there...

00:31

If it weren't for all the hoarding.

00:34

If the tower of cans grows three-quarters of a foot each month, how many months will

00:42

it take for all those canned beets and carrots to reach the ceiling?

00:46

Here are your options: First, we need to write this out in an equation.

00:54

Let's see if we can find a piece of paper and pencil in all this junk.

00:58

Okay, so we'll describe this as...

01:00

Current height of the cans...

01:02

Plus growth rate...

01:06

Times number of months... for which we'll use M as the variable -- notice the clever

01:10

first letter thing there -

01:15

Equals height of the ceiling which is 20 feet. We're solving for number of months, so that

01:22

value is M

01:25

Here's our finished equation: First, we need to subtract eleven from each

01:33

side.

01:33

We know you wish you could subtract that eleven-foot-stack of canned peas from your life, but this is

01:39

just hypothetical. Sorry.

01:41

That leaves us with three-fourths X on the left and nine on the right.

01:46

In order to get rid of the fraction, we need to multiply each side by the inverse of the

01:50

fraction.

01:51

Inverse means to flip the fraction over, kind of like multiplying by its opposite.

01:55

Just like you want to live in a house that isn't filled with horded emergency supplies.DELETE

01:57

In this case, the multiplicative inverse would be four over three. So multiply both sides

02:02

by four over three. That cancels out the three-fourths on the

02:06

left, leaving us with X.

02:12

Multiply nine by four over three to get thirty-six over three.

02:20

Simplify that to get twelve. The answer is B, X equals twelve. So it looks

02:30

like you have a year before your basement is totally full.

02:34

Look at the bright side. If a disaster does wipe out your house, you can live in a can

02:38

fort. Food and shelter in one convenient place.

02:42

Plus, you now have the invaluable survival skill of Using Multiplicative Inverse to Solve

02:48

Equations.

02:48

We'll be at your place when disaster strikes.

Up Next

Piecewise Functions
6148 Views

Don’t even think about starting up your combo lemonade/fro-yo stand without first making sure you understand piecewise functions. You’re just a...

Related Videos

Domain and Range
5385 Views

Domain and range: two terms you will learn to love (or hate with a vengeance). The domain is the set of all possible x values, and range is the set...

Functions as Models
730 Views

Functions briefly flirted with the idea of being infomercial hosts, but they didn’t shine when talking on-camera. They’re much better off in th...

Introduction to Functions
17460 Views

This video will tell you all about the function of functions.

Function Rules, Tables, and Graphs
2007 Views

Looking to find function formulas from tables? We've got all you need, right here in this video.