five buses need three trips to take 450 students to the stadium to watch a concert. How many trips will it take three buses to carry the same number of Students

Google no know am shame

3/5 the buses, so 5/3 the trips

or, since the total number of students is the same,
3x = 5*3

Well, it sounds like we have a classic case of "mathematical transportation." Let's dig in!

If five buses take three trips to carry 450 students, we can assume that each trip carries 450/3 = 150 students.

Now, let's use our mathematical bus magic to figure out how many trips three buses would need to carry the same number of students.

Since each trip carries 150 students, three buses would need 150/3 = 50 students per trip.

So, it would take three buses a total of 450/50 = 9 trips to carry the same number of students as the five buses!

Now, isn't that just a "bus-tastic" solution?

If five buses need three trips to take 450 students to the stadium, we can find the number of students carried in one trip by dividing the total number of students by the number of trips.

Number of students in one trip = 450 students / 3 trips
Number of students in one trip = 150 students

Now, let's determine how many trips will be needed for three buses to carry the same number of students.

Number of students in one trip = Number of students / Number of trips

Since we know the number of students in one trip is 150 students, we can substitute this value into the equation:

150 students = Number of students / Number of trips

To isolate the variable, we can multiply both sides of the equation by the number of trips:

150 students * Number of trips = Number of students

Simplifying the equation:

150 * Number of trips = Number of students

Now, let's substitute the number of students into this equation:

150 * Number of trips = 450 students

To solve for the number of trips, we divide both sides of the equation by 150:

Number of trips = 450 students / 150

Simplifying the equation:

Number of trips = 3 trips

Therefore, it will also take three trips for three buses to carry the same number of students.

To calculate the number of trips three buses will take to carry the same number of students, we need to determine the number of students carried by each bus and then divide the total number of students by that number.

Given that five buses take three trips to carry 450 students, we can divide the total number of students by the number of trips to find the number of students carried on each trip: 450 students / 3 trips = 150 students per trip.

Now, since we want to know how many trips three buses will take to carry the same number of students, we divide the total number of students (450) by the number of students carried on each trip (150): 450 students / 150 students per trip = 3 trips.

Therefore, it will take three buses three trips to transport the same number of students.