Mr. Mauldin has twice as many students as Mrs. Sasser and Mr. Khan combined. If Mr. Mauldin has 35 students, and Mrs. Sasser has 9, how many students does Mr. Khan have? Tim represents this situation with the equation 35 = 2(9 + k), where k represents the number of students Mr. Khan has. Tim found the answer to be 8.5. Which statement is true about Tim's solution to the problem? The value 8.5 is the correct solution to the equation, and it is reasonable, because if it is plugged into 35 = 2(9 + k), it makes the equation true. O The value 8.5 is not the correct solution to the equation because Tim made a calculation error. The value 8.5 is the correct solution to the equation, but it is not reasonable, because there can't be 8.5 students in a class. This means the problem's situation can't be true.​