MedVision ad

Most difficult 4u q? (1 Viewer)

N

ND

Guest
Which do you think is the hardest 4u question from like '90-now? I think it's definately Q8 b) iii) from the '00 paper. I've got no idea how to do it... Can anyone think of a harder one?
 
N

ND

Guest
Originally posted by underthesun
e irrationality? I still haven't looked at it yet..
Actually i didn't think those were too bad (compared to the '00 one).
 
N

ND

Guest
Originally posted by Harimau
Stop making me cry...
Heheh nah you misunderstood me, the irrationality ones were obviously difficult compared to most 4u questions, but i meant that the '00 one was much harder (IMO). I had a look at the '89 one, and yeh that looks pretty damn hard too (haven't had a go at it yet though).
 

turtle_2468

Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2002
Messages
408
Location
North Shore, Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
1998? Whatever the polynomials one was... lol, I got that in a tutoring session (meaning I was tutoring someone else), that got me... lol.. I reckon even 2000 is more approachable than that. But hey, just me... I have a stuffed up sense of relative difficulty a lot of the time :)
 

underthesun

N1NJ4
Joined
Aug 10, 2002
Messages
1,781
Location
At the top of Riovanes Castle
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2010
Originally posted by freaking_out
do u reckon they'll ask another one on the irrationality of "e" again?
Dont' know, maybe this time pi irrationality. I think it's in the parabola magazine, after there was a hoax that the value of pi terminates after 3 billion places (UNSW maths magazine), not that I read it :D
 

freaking_out

Saddam's new life
Joined
Sep 5, 2002
Messages
6,786
Location
In an underground bunker
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
Originally posted by underthesun
Dont' know, maybe this time pi irrationality. I think it's in the parabola magazine, after there was a hoax that the value of pi terminates after 3 billion places (UNSW maths magazine), not that I read it :D
hey, so where can i find the proof of pi irrationality and e irrationality (besides the past hsc paper).;)
 

nerdd

Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2003
Messages
345
i just can't do polynomials connected with complex.
so any of them shit me to pieces

and the binomial ones!
THEY SUCK

other than that, funny volumes annoy me
 

Fosweb

I could be your Doctor...
Joined
Jun 20, 2003
Messages
594
Location
UNSW. Still.
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
Originally posted by freaking_out
hey, so where can i find the proof of pi irrationality and e irrationality (besides the past hsc paper).;)
I think i remember seeing something on both of these in that Harder 3U thing on Dr Buchanans site. (The Bill Pender thing. Along with lots of other possible Q8 stuff.)

Q8 is usually harder 3U right?
 

freaking_out

Saddam's new life
Joined
Sep 5, 2002
Messages
6,786
Location
In an underground bunker
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
N

ND

Guest
Originally posted by turtle_2468
1998? Whatever the polynomials one was... lol, I got that in a tutoring session (meaning I was tutoring someone else), that got me... lol.. I reckon even 2000 is more approachable than that. But hey, just me... I have a stuffed up sense of relative difficulty a lot of the time :)
There was no polynomial one in '98 (well there was one in q7, but there's no way you'd have a problem with it). The only really hard polynomial was in the last part of Q8b) in '94, where they had a diagram of a region in the AB plane (where A and B were coefficients of a polynomial) for values that the polynomial had no real roots, and you had to find the line/curve making the region. Is that the one you're referring to?
 

maniacguy

Member
Joined
Mar 13, 2003
Messages
223
That shouldn't have been too bad for him - he hates geometry, not polynomials.

(Anyone feeling curious about the solution, the trick is to observe that there are two sets of conditions:
- when no real values of u exist (gives the parabolic side)
- when you get real values of u, but then can't solve for x (gives the straight line)

In both cases, set the determinant to a value less than 0 and then solve the equation[1].

Coincidentally, a lucky guess gave me the point T as (6,8) before I'd started, but that was a pure fluke...)

[1] Any uni student curious as to why b^2 - 4ac is called the determinant can do second year linear algebra at UNSW (I don't know which year it's done in in other unis) to find out. It is related to the determinant of a 2 x 2 matrix with entries [a b/2 b/2 c], although some fiddling obviously occurs to get the easier form...
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top