The Matrix
Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2012
- Messages
- 174
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2012
Does anyone have the solutions for this paper: http://4unitmaths.com/2001moriah.pdf ??? It is extremely hard
I divided my holidays into 3 parts, 4 days for MX2, 4 days for chemistry and 4 days for physics. I finished MX2 revision 2 days ago, I did 2 chapters per day and about 25 hard questions for each that cover each chapter. I memorised the first 2 modules of chemistry yesterday and today so I'm doing the remaining 2 modules tomorrow and the day after, then spend the remaining 4 days of the holidays doing the 4 modules of physics. I don't have to study for biology because I don't want it to count for my HSC because it sucks. Also English is easy and 3 unit is a joke so I finished it like 3 months ago.If you're stuck just keep moving! Come back to it later.
Don't neglect your other subjects though...doing well in worse-scaling subjects + not amazing at 4u is better than amazing at 4u + crap at worse-scaling. If that made any sense.
where is carrotsticks to help usOk honestly that's the most titf paper. Up to the transformations...They expect you to expand ok no. And the 5 mark WTF. I'm taking a break.
LOL where is the space for english?I divided my holidays into 3 parts, 4 days for MX2, 4 days for chemistry and 4 days for physics.
Isn't it like a series of polynomials where they are derivatives/primitives of each other?Actually Bernoulli Polynomials featured in Sydney Grammar paper - almost the same question but tweaked a little. 1999 SGS - Moriah probably took it from there.
English and biology are rote learning, no need to study for them, I can memorise everything the day before the testLOL where is the space for english?
Not sure if you ended up solving this but I think this is how you do it:WTF killer paper. I'm up to the inequality with factorials. No idea...The direction doesn't work if you try to sub the equations into each other
Or you could do this lol.For part Q3c) since x and y are positive integers and given
x - 1 > y
then
(x - 1)! > y!
Hence
(x - 1)!(x - 1) > y(y!)
x(x - 1)! - (x - 1)! > ((y + 1) - 1)y!
x! - (x - 1)! > (y + 1)! - y!
x! + y! > (x - 1)! + (y + 1)!
"Taking It Too Far", makes sense, hehe...Haha poor Realise. I noticed people said 'titf'. What does 'titf' mean?
http://home.fuse.net/wolfonenet/FTP/Reverse Engineering Mathematics.pdf is this the technique you used? Looks like they use it in English too, heheFor part Q3c) since x and y are positive integers and given
x - 1 > y
then
(x - 1)! > y!
Hence
(x - 1)!(x - 1) > y(y!)
x(x - 1)! - (x - 1)! > ((y + 1) - 1)y!
x! - (x - 1)! > (y + 1)! - y!
x! + y! > (x - 1)! + (y + 1)!