x cant be equal or between 0 and -1 and x cannot be less than or equal to 1/3Trebla said:Solve for x:
ln (1 + 1/x) ≥ ln (3x - 1)
3unitz said:i)
by considering the product rule find y in terms of x of:
y'.e^x + y.e^x = x
hence find the value of y as x approaches infinity
ii)
find y in terms of x of:
y' + y.x^2 = x^2
hence find the value of y as x approaches infinity
d^n(xe^x)/dx^n = e^x(x + n)Trebla said:Prove by induction that for positive integer n, the n-th derivative of xex is given by:
dn(xex)/dxn = ex(x + n)
sorry. Fixed itTimothy.Siu said:wats the s?
abs(ax+by) = sqrt (a^2x^2 + b^2y^2 + 2abxy)addikaye03 said:sorry. Fixed it
CORRECT.Trebla said:This looks like an Extension 2 type question lol.
x² + y² = 1
a² + b² = 1
So
(x² + y²)(a² + b²) = 1
a²x² + a²y² + b²x² + b²y² = 1
But (ay - bx)² ≥ 0
=> a²y² + b²x² ≥ 2abxy
Hence
a²x² + a²y² + b²x² + b²y² ≥ a²x² + b²y² + 2abxy
1 ≥ (ax + by)²
Thus
| ax + by | ≤ 1
Your questions was quite an open-ended question. Any working that would have proved that abs (ax+by) >=1 would be fine.addikaye03 said:CORRECT.
That was the exact method i used, down to the last line. So i give u 6/4 marks!
And it was classed as harder 3U
Don't quite understand the last part :STrebla said:This looks like an Extension 2 type question lol.
x² + y² = 1
a² + b² = 1
So
(x² + y²)(a² + b²) = 1
a²x² + a²y² + b²x² + b²y² = 1
But (ay - bx)² ≥ 0
=> a²y² + b²x² ≥ 2abxy
Hence
a²x² + a²y² + b²x² + b²y² ≥ a²x² + b²y² + 2abxy
1 ≥ (ax + by)²
Thus
| ax + by | ≤ 1
This doesn't work.Timothy.Siu said:uhh ok
Prove by induction that 7+77+777+....+777...to n digits=7/81(10n+1-9n-10)