hello all
i have encountered a problem from the 2000 paper ( http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/hsc_exams/hsc2000exams/hsc00_maths/00mathematics23U.pdf ) that i havn't been able to wrap my head around yet.
Question 7, part c, part ii.
Correct me if i am wrong but when you use integration to find an area, the area is only between the bottom of the curve nad the x axis (or the absolute of the top of the line and x axis)? How then can you simply find the shaded area? After looking up some answers it seem both the BoS marking notes and a seperate book seem to just do a straight integration, minusing the area from the parabole from the straight line, but i fail to see how this could work seeing as the area is both above and under the x axis. I could understand this approach if both line and parabole were pulled up by 2 units so nothing was under the x axis.
Is my understanding completly wrong?
Any help would be much appreciated. This question is killing me.
i have encountered a problem from the 2000 paper ( http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/hsc_exams/hsc2000exams/hsc00_maths/00mathematics23U.pdf ) that i havn't been able to wrap my head around yet.
Question 7, part c, part ii.
Correct me if i am wrong but when you use integration to find an area, the area is only between the bottom of the curve nad the x axis (or the absolute of the top of the line and x axis)? How then can you simply find the shaded area? After looking up some answers it seem both the BoS marking notes and a seperate book seem to just do a straight integration, minusing the area from the parabole from the straight line, but i fail to see how this could work seeing as the area is both above and under the x axis. I could understand this approach if both line and parabole were pulled up by 2 units so nothing was under the x axis.
Is my understanding completly wrong?
Any help would be much appreciated. This question is killing me.
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