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1st Year University Mathematics Thread (1 Viewer)

RenegadeMx

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IF x is an integer, then it can be odd or even

Suppose x is odd, then there exists an integer M such that x = 2M + 1











Suppose x is even, then there exists an integer M such that x = 2M

So


ONLY IF, not sure atm, thinking about the contrapositive

I have this:

Let x be p/q such that p and q are integers and q is not 0 or 1

LHS = x = p/q

RHS = floor(x/2) + ceil(x/2)
= floor(p/2q) + ceil(p/2q)
yeah this was on of the questions in the discrete final, did exactly like you so far but cant get the opposite way
 

seanieg89

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RHS is defined to be integer lol.
So what? The claim is not that the RHS function outputs an integer iff x is an integer, the claim is that the RHS expression is EQUAL to x iff x is an integer.

We write x/2=m+d with m an integer and 0 =< d < 1.

If d=0, then RHS=m+m=2m=x=LHS.

If d is nonzero, then RHS-LHS=(2m+1)-(2m+2d).

Which is zero iff d=1/2.

This means that the identity in the question is true iff x/2 is a half-integer, that is iff x is an integer.
 
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nightweaver066

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Alternatively, a simpler way to do it would be to use complex numbers.

Consider the case where z = 0. Then, it boils down to the vectors formed by z = 1/5(4 + 3i)exp(i pi/4), w = 1/5(4 + 3i)exp(-i pi/4)

So we get our two solutions,



Alternatively alternatively, rotate the vector using a rotation matrix.
 
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emilios

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hey y'all. how would you say 1st year maths stacks up against HSC 4U? harder? about the same? more crammed syllabus?
 

anomalousdecay

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solve or find the ananytic solution of
Ok I gave this a crack but nah got nowhere. Non-linear, non-separable ODE's is something I've never encountered before. Tried substitutions, not exact, not separable, integrating factor does not work. Can anyone give me a tip on what can be done for this (do keep in mind I'm only in first year so I have never touched an ODE like this before)?

hey y'all. how would you say 1st year maths stacks up against HSC 4U? harder? about the same? more crammed syllabus?
Make a thread on this if you feel necessary.

The workload is a bit more in my opinion. However, the maths requires a lot more rigourous and well defined rules and definitions. There is quite a degree of abstraction to it as well.

You'll be fine though. I found first year maths more interesting than what we learnt in high school.
 

HeroicPandas

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Ok I gave this a crack but nah got nowhere. Non-linear, non-separable ODE's is something I've never encountered before. Tried substitutions, not exact, not separable, integrating factor does not work. Can anyone give me a tip on what can be done for this (do keep in mind I'm only in first year so I have never touched an ODE like this before)?
Dividing both sides by 'y', we can use some kind of substitution (involving that fact that y'/y = d(lny)/dy) to reduce the LHS into something easier (I guess it might a substitution involving logs)
 
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anomalousdecay

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Dividing both sides by 'y', we can use some kind of substitution (involving that fact that y'/y = d(lny)/dy) to reduce the LHS into something easier (I guess it might a substitution involving logs)
I'll try it again now.

EDIT: Got this now:



Keep going around in circles getting more and more ODE's which I can't solve with these substitutions :haha:

Updating my substitutions so far lol:

u = ln y
u = 1/y
sqrt(u) = y
u = dy/dx
y = du/dx

Every single time I just get something that can't be solved using first year methods using these substitutions. I guess someone else can confirm if any of these substitutions work or not as I may have made a mistake somewhere.
 
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nightweaver066

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With that DE, I don't think a substitution is necessary, and that the solution can be implicit.

A tip, assuming I did it correctly, is just aim to solve the DE, don't solely rely on methods you learnt in uni.
 
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