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Extension One Revising Game (2 Viewers)

Drongoski

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what are u doing staying up so late ??

Anyway here's my attempt:





Hopefully answer correct.
 
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Pwnage101

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what are u doing staying up so late ??

Anyway here's my attempt:





Hopefully answer correct.
it might be quiker not to square,. because the the numerator AND the denomenator are both positive, since they are both absoulte values. Then you could take cases.

But yeh your method is fine.
 

Drongoski

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Yes there are many ways of skinning this cat. I just don't enjoy doing cases if I can help it. Thank u.
 

jet

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Okay, Parabola,

Prove that pq = -1 if the chord PQ passes through (0,a) and hence find the locus of R, the intersection of the normals at P and Q, if the chord passes through the point (0, a). The equation of the chord is . You must prove all other formulas. [5 Marks]
 

azureus88

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[maths]r\binom{n}{r}=\frac{rn!}{r!(n-r)!}=n\frac{(n-1)!}{(r-1)!(n-r)!}=n\binom{n-1}{r-1}[/maths]


[maths]P_1+P_2+P_3+...+P_n\\=\sum_{r=1}^{n}\binom{n}{r}x^r(1-x)^{n-r}\\=(1-x+x)^n\\=1[/maths]


[maths]P_1+2P_2+3P_3+...+nP_n\\=\sum_{r=1}^{n}r\binom{n}{r}x^r(1-x)^{n-r}\\=\sum_{r=1}^{n}n\binom{n-1}{r-1}x^r(1-x)^{n-r}\\=nx\sum_{r=1}^{n}\binom{n-1}{r-1}x^{r-1}(1-x)^{n-r}\\=nx(1-x+x)^{n-1}\\=nx[/maths]


New Question:

Differentiate x^x with respect to x.
 

azureus88

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[maths]\int_{0}^{\pi/4}(\cos x+\sec x)^2dx\\=\int_{0}^{\pi/4}(\cos^2x+sec^2x+2)dx\\=\int_{0}^{\pi/4}(\frac{5}{2}+\frac{1}{2}\cos2x+\sec^2x)dx\\=[\frac{5}{2}x+\frac{1}{4}\sin2x+\tan x]^{\pi/4}_0\\=\frac{5\pi}{8}+\frac{5}{4}[/maths]

New Question:

Find @ if the quadratic y=ax(x-1) is tangent to circle x^2 + y^2 = 1 at x=@.
 
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lolokay

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Find @ if the quadratic y=ax(x-1) is tangent to circle x^2 + y^2 = 1 at x=@.
if you draw the parabola, and the circle, then if they're tangent, the line from the origin to @ must be perpendicular to the tangent (circle geo property).
the gradient of that line is a@(@-1)/@ = a(@-1)
by differentiating we find the gradient of the tangent to be a(2@-1)

so a^2(@-1)(2@-1) = -1 (perpendicular gradients)
a^2 = 1/(1-@)(2@-1)

then, we have
1-@^2 = a^2@^2(1-@)^2
1+@ = @^2(1-@)/(1-@)(2@-1)
= @^2/(2@-1)
(1+@)(2@-1) = @^2
@^2 + @ - 1 = 0
@ = -1/2 +- rt(5)/2
and from the diagram we can see that @ must be positive, so @ = -1/2 + rt5 /2

is there a simpler way to solve this?
 

addikaye03

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Posting a Q on behalf of lolokay, Question:

For the Geometric series a+ar+ar^2+...
Show that if lim(n-->infinite) Sn=S, then S-Sn=ar^n/1-r

Hence, find the least value of n for which (S-Sn) for the series 6+3+1.5+...is less than 0.0001.
 

Drongoski

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I assume question is find x given the expression = 0


52x - 5x - 20 = (5x)2 - 5x - 20 = 0 (a quadratic eqn in 5x)

.: (5x - 5)(5x + 4) = 0 ==> 5x = 5 ==> x = 1

5^x + 4 =/= 0
 
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shaon0

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Posting a Q on behalf of lolokay, Question:

For the Geometric series a+ar+ar^2+...
Show that if lim(n-->infinite) Sn=S, then S-Sn=ar^n/1-r

Hence, find the least value of n for which (S-Sn) for the series 6+3+1.5+...is less than 0.0001.
S= S {inf} = (a/(1-r))

S-S{n}
= (a/(1-r)) - (a(r^n-1)/r-1)
= (a/(1-r)) - (a(1-r^n)/r-1)
= (ar^n)/(1-r)

S-S{n} < 0.0001
(ar^n/1-r) < 0.0001
(6(1/2)^n/(0.5)) < 0.0001
(1/2)^n < (0.0001/12)
n < ln(0.0001/12)/ln(1/2)
n < 16.87...
Thus, n is 16.

I don't think my answer is right though.
 
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