5. Consumer surplus for a group of consumers The following greph plots the demand curve (blue line) for severat consumers in the market for ve. headsets in Meadvile, a small town located in Pennsylvania. The Meadville market price of a VR headset is glven by the horizontal black line at $180. Each rectangle you can place on the following graph corresponds to a particular buryer in this market: orange (square symbols) for Alex, green (triangle symbois) for Becky, purple (diamond symbois) for Clancy, tan (dash symbols) for Elieen, and blue (cincie symbois) for Hubert. Use the rectangles to shade the areas representing consumer surplus for each person who is waling and able to purchase a VR headset at a market price of \$180. (Note: If a person wid not purchase a VR headset at the market price, indicate this by leaving his or her rectangle in its original position on the palette.) Based on the information on the previous graph, you can tell that will buy vR headsets at the given market price, and total consumer surplus in this market will be On the following graph, use the rectangles once agoln to shade the areas representing consumer surplus for each person who is willing and able to purchase a VR headset at the new market price: orange (square symbois) for Alex, green (triangle symbols) for Becky, purple (diamond symbols) for Clancy, tan (dash symbols) for Eileen, and blue (circle symbols) for Hubert. (Note: If a person will not purchase al VR headset at the new market price, indicate this by leaving his or her rectangle in its original position on the palette.) Based on the information in the second graph, when the market price of a VR headset increases to $300, the number of consumers willing to buy a vR. headset to , and total consumer surplus to