michaeljennings
Active Member
Has anyone got a worked solution to Chapter 7E, Q11 from the Cambridge Year 12 Textbook?
Cheers
Cheers
Has anyone got a worked solution to Chapter 7E, Q11 from the Cambridge Year 12 Textbook?
Cheers
Integrand, your solution can't be used, because this is a 3U question and you have used a 4U approach.
Integrand, your solution can't be used, because this is a 3U question and you have used a 4U approach.
Well, put it this way, all questions in a 3U paper (and more broadly, 3U textbooks) are (or maybe I should say "should be" to stay safe on this issue) designed such that the questions can be done using only 3U (and below) concepts. So you're essentially assuming 3U students can pluck the 4U concept of angular velocity out of thin air when faced with this question. I'm not saying your method won't be accepted, it's just the OP seems to be wanting a method appropriate to show to 3U students.
Again, I don't like saying this, but if I am informed correctly, implicit differentiation is a 4U concept.
And implicit differentiation is just the chain rule essentially. Whenever we use 'implicit differentiation', a 3U student could theoretically use the chain rule – just replace y with y(x) and differentiate using product rules etc.Again, I don't like saying this, but if I am informed correctly, implicit differentiation is a 4U concept.
Well, at least circles is 3UWell, technically, you could say everything in 4U is in 3U, because we do use 3U concepts to derive 4U concepts. So this sort of discussion will only go in circles.
But not circular motionWell, at least circles is 3U
Well I remember doing implicit differentiation in 3u before learning it in 4uAgain, I don't like saying this, but if I am informed correctly, implicit differentiation is a 4U concept.
Well the students are given the tangential velocity to be 2, which may be converted to angular velocity using basic arithmetic.Does anyone know how to do it using an Extension 1 method?