FIRST PERSON TO ANSWER GET BRAINLYEST Madie drove 200 miles at a speed of 50 miles per hour. Which equation will help you find the number of hours she was driving?
StartFraction 50 miles Over 1 hour EndFraction = StartFraction 200 miles Over question mark hours EndFraction
StartFraction 50 miles Over 1 hour EndFraction = StartFraction question mark hours Over 200 miles EndFraction
StartFraction 200 miles Over 1 hour EndFraction = StartFraction 50 miles Over question mark hours EndFraction
StartFraction 200 miles Over 1 hour EndFraction = StartFraction question mark hours Over 50 miles EndFraction

Respuesta :

Answer:

200/50=h

h=number of hours

Step-by-step explanation:

Maddie drove 200 miles at a speed of 50 miles per hour.

As we know

speed = miles/hours  

and to calculate we use the formula

Hour = miles/speed

So the equation that helps to find the number of hours she was driving =

h = 200/50

Equation will be h =  200/50

ario05

Answer:   StartFraction 50 miles Over 1 hour EndFraction = StartFraction 200 miles Over question mark hours EndFraction

Step-by-step explanation:

For constant speed, miles and hours are proportional. One possible equation is ...

 

_____

I personally like to put the unknown in the numerator, so the equation can be solved in one step. The equation above requires two steps: one to cross-multiply, and one to divide by 50.

I might write the equation as ...

 (? hours)/(200 mi) = (1 hour)/(50 mi) . . . . multiply by 200 mi to solve

Another way to write the equation is matching the ratios of times to corresponding miles:

 (? hours)/(1 hour) = (200 mi)/(50 mi)

This only requires simplification to solve it: ? = 4.

So it would be A.

Step-by-step explanation: