ASVAB Arithmetic Reasoning Practice Test 487697 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 2.95
Score 0% 59%

Review

1

What is \( \frac{3c^6}{9c^4} \)?

60% Answer Correctly
\(\frac{1}{3}\)c-2
\(\frac{1}{3}\)c2
3c10
\(\frac{1}{3}\)c\(\frac{2}{3}\)

Solution

To divide terms with exponents, the base of both exponents must be the same. In this case they are so divide the coefficients and subtract the exponents:

\( \frac{3c^6}{9c^4} \)
\( \frac{3}{9} \) c(6 - 4)
\(\frac{1}{3}\)c2


2

How many 1 gallon cans worth of fuel would you need to pour into an empty 10 gallon tank to fill it exactly halfway?

52% Answer Correctly
2
5
10
5

Solution

To fill a 10 gallon tank exactly halfway you'll need 5 gallons of fuel. Each fuel can holds 1 gallons so:

cans = \( \frac{5 \text{ gallons}}{1 \text{ gallons}} \) = 5


3

Cooks are needed to prepare for a large party. Each cook can bake either 2 large cakes or 19 small cakes per hour. The kitchen is available for 2 hours and 27 large cakes and 460 small cakes need to be baked.

How many cooks are required to bake the required number of cakes during the time the kitchen is available?

41% Answer Correctly
13
20
5
6

Solution

If a single cook can bake 2 large cakes per hour and the kitchen is available for 2 hours, a single cook can bake 2 x 2 = 4 large cakes during that time. 27 large cakes are needed for the party so \( \frac{27}{4} \) = 6\(\frac{3}{4}\) cooks are needed to bake the required number of large cakes.

If a single cook can bake 19 small cakes per hour and the kitchen is available for 2 hours, a single cook can bake 19 x 2 = 38 small cakes during that time. 460 small cakes are needed for the party so \( \frac{460}{38} \) = 12\(\frac{2}{19}\) cooks are needed to bake the required number of small cakes.

Because you can't employ a fractional cook, round the number of cooks needed for each type of cake up to the next whole number resulting in 7 + 13 = 20 cooks.


4

What is 8a4 - 9a4?

71% Answer Correctly
17a16
-a4
a-4
17a-8

Solution

To add or subtract terms with exponents, both the base and the exponent must be the same. In this case they are so subtract the coefficients and retain the base and exponent:

8a4 - 9a4
(8 - 9)a4
-a4


5

Which of the following is an improper fraction?

70% Answer Correctly

\(1 {2 \over 5} \)

\({2 \over 5} \)

\({a \over 5} \)

\({7 \over 5} \)


Solution

A rational number (or fraction) is represented as a ratio between two integers, a and b, and has the form \({a \over b}\) where a is the numerator and b is the denominator. An improper fraction (\({5 \over 3} \)) has a numerator with a greater absolute value than the denominator and can be converted into a mixed number (\(1 {2 \over 3} \)) which has a whole number part and a fractional part.