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Mathematics Marathon HSC 09 (5 Viewers)

00iCon

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2-6+8-8+32-10+...

find the sum of the first 20 terms of this series
10 terms of arithmetic:
S10=10/2(2(-6)+9(-2))
=5(-12-18)
=-150
10 terms of GP:
S10=[2(4^10-1)]/[1-4]
=2*1048575/3
=699050

.'. 699050-150=698900

now, class! integrate: [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x]
 

untouchablecuz

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hold up guys

this relationship is moving way too fast

i wanna get to know you guys first
 

eldore44

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integrate: [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x]
[1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x] = [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-sqroot(x)][1+sqroot(x)]

=1/[1+sqroot(x)]
u=sqroot(x)
du/dx=1/sqroot(x)
du.sqroot(x)=dx
du.u=dx
du.u/(1+u)
=1 - 1/(1+u)
integral of 1 - 1/(1+u) = u - log(1+u) + c
=sqroot(x) - log(1+sqroot(x)) + c

.. i think.

Differentiate tan^-1(x^4) with respect to x

EDIT: there should be some 2's floating around from the derivative of sqroot(x)
 
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its not 2unit its integration using substitution its a part of 3unit....can som1 doing it using a 2unit method coz im stuck
 

00iCon

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[1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x] = [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-sqroot(x)][1+sqroot(x)]

=1/[1+sqroot(x)]
u=sqroot(x)
du/dx=1/sqroot(x)
du.sqroot(x)=dx
du.u=dx
du.u/(1+u)
=1 - 1/(1+u)
integral of 1 - 1/(1+u) = u - log(1+u) + c
=sqroot(x) - log(1+sqroot(x)) + c

.. i think.

Differentiate tan^-1(x^4) with respect to x

EDIT: there should be some 2's floating around from the derivative of sqroot(x)
Methinks perfect square in the numerator is an easier method.
Actually, your first step is wrong!
btw, that was a trial ext2 Q7 (c) worth 2 marks.

dont ask 4 the method but:
d[tan^-1(x^4)]/dx
=[4x^3]/[1+x^8]

i reiterate:
integrate: [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x]
GL ;)
 

AlexJB

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e^2x+3e^x-10=0
Let u = e^x
u^2 + 3u - 10 = 0
(u-2)(u+5) = 0
u = 2 or -5
e^x = 2 or e^x = -5
x = ln(2) or x = ln(-5) [not solution]
Therefore x = ln2

Differentiate y = cos(ln(x) + 1)
 
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can som1 plzz integrate: [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x] using a 2unit method....i kinda gave up on 3unit afta the trials
 
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y'=-sin(lnx+1).1/x
=-sin(lnx+1)/x

the first three term of an arithmetic series are -1+4+9...
i) find the 60th term
ii) hence or otherwise find the sum of the first 60 terms of the series
 

eldore44

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[1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x] = [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-sqroot(x)][1+sqroot(x)]

=1/[1+sqroot(x)]
u=sqroot(x)
du/dx=1/2sqroot(x)
du.2sqroot(x)=dx
du.2u=dx
du.2u/(1+u)
=2 - 2/(1+u)
integral of 2 - 2/(1+u) = 2u - 2log(1+u) + c
=2sqroot(x) - 2log(1+sqroot(x)) + c

That looks fine. Where is the mistake?

Also, I dont know if this could even be a 2 unit question.
 

Zak Ambrose

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e^2x+3e^x-10=0
Let u = e^x
u^2 + 3u - 10 = 0
(u-2)(u+5) = 0
u = 2 or -5
e^x = 2 or e^x = -5
x = ln(2) or x = ln(-5) [not solution]
Therefore x = ln2

Differentiate y = cos(ln(x) + 1)
y= cos (ln (x) + 1)
y'= -1/x (-sin (ln(x) + 1))
= [sin (ln (x) + 1)]/x


enough calculus

(c) A chessboard has 32 black squares and 32 white squares. Tanya chooses three different squares at random.
(i) What is the probability that Tanya chooses three white squares?
(ii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are the same colour?
(iii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are not the same colour?
 

ninetypercent

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the first three term of an arithmetic series are -1+4+9...
i) find the 60th term
ii) hence or otherwise find the sum of the first 60 terms of the series

i) T = a+(n-1)d
= -1 + (60-1)5
= 294

ii) S = n/2[2a + (n-1)d]
= 60/2[2x-1 + (60-1)5]
= 30[-2 + 295]
= 8790
 

00iCon

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[1-sqroot(x)]/[1-x] = [1-sqroot(x)]/[1-sqroot(x)][1+sqroot(x)]

=1/[1+sqroot(x)]
u=sqroot(x)
du/dx=1/2sqroot(x)
du.2sqroot(x)=dx
du.2u=dx
du.2u/(1+u)
=2 - 2/(1+u)
integral of 2 - 2/(1+u) = 2u - 2log(1+u) + c
=2sqroot(x) - 2log(1+sqroot(x)) + c

That looks fine. Where is the mistake?

Also, I dont know if this could even be a 2 unit question.
The first line!

=integral(1+sqroot(x))dx
=x+(2/3)(x^(3/2))+C

It's not that hard, im not sure of the extent of the 2unit syllabus
 

untouchablecuz

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y= cos (ln (x) + 1)
y'= -1/x (-sin (ln(x) + 1))
= [sin (ln (x) + 1)]/x


enough calculus

(c) A chessboard has 32 black squares and 32 white squares. Tanya chooses three different squares at random.
(i) What is the probability that Tanya chooses three white squares?
(ii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are the same colour?
(iii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are not the same colour?
i) 32C3/64C3=5/42
ii) 32C3/64C3 + 32C3/64C3=5/21
iii) P(not the same colour)=1-P(same colours)=1-5/21=16/21
 

untouchablecuz

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The first line!

=integral(1+sqroot(x))dx
=x+(2/3)(x^(3/2))+C

It's not that hard, im not sure of the extent of the 2unit syllabus
-.-

thats a diff integral

u gave us initially:

integral of (1-sqrt(x))/(1-x)
 

AlexJB

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y= cos (ln (x) + 1)
y'= -1/x (-sin (ln(x) + 1))
= [sin (ln (x) + 1)]/x


enough calculus

(c) A chessboard has 32 black squares and 32 white squares. Tanya chooses three different squares at random.
(i) What is the probability that Tanya chooses three white squares?
(ii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are the same colour?
(iii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are not the same colour?
You missed a minus in your answer. Been a while since I did probability. I'm assuming by different she can't pick the same square twice?

i. 32P3/64P3 = 5/42
ii. 2 x 5/42 = 5/21
iii. 1- 5/21 = 16/21

Let me know if I'm wrong.

---

Using the substitution u = 2x + 1 or otherwise, integrate [4x]/[2x + 1], limits 1,0
 

00iCon

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(c) A chessboard has 32 black squares and 32 white squares. Tanya chooses three different squares at random.
(i) What is the probability that Tanya chooses three white squares?
(ii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are the same colour?
(iii) What is the probability that the three squares Tanya chooses are not the same colour?
i) 1/2 * 31/63 * 15/31
460/3906
230/1953

ii) 460/1953

iii)1493/1953

i have no 2 unit questions.
 

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