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  1. largarithmic

    Polynomials question (or rather moving stuff about)

    its not that bad, just act as if its a normal plus or minus sign. When you multiply a plusminus sign by a plusminus sign (i.e. you square it) you get a plus, and I think thats all you really need to know. Or just split it into two cases, 1. when its a plus, 2. when its a minus etc
  2. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    they're basically my favourite parts of the course :P do you have another topic youd prefer? a more conventional one lol (Im thinking demoivres/polynomials/complexy things you can get cool questions with those)?
  3. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    "Sydney Grammar School, Mathematics Department, Extension 2 Exercises, 2011, Book One/Two". It's not even a real textbook, its a cheaply printed volume of notes and exercises with a light blue/light green (for book1/book2) cardboard cover. And I think grammar thought the other textbooks were...
  4. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    yeah that um it was in my 4u textbook. sydney grammar has its own textbook/handout that it hands out for 4u, apparently all the commercially available ones are crappy. They used to do that for 3u as well, until it got turned into the cambridge 3u book (pender, sadler, shea, ward are all...
  5. largarithmic

    Polynomials question (or rather moving stuff about)

    I assume they just subbed back in (x +/- root(x^2 - 4))/2 into the original equation and manipulated it using index laws/general algebra. You gotta be careful of the plusminus sign though but it should be alright? no tricks involved the other way to do it would be to start from: a+b+c = -3...
  6. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    pretty poor bet lol. try horses instead. thanks for the encouragement though yeah thats right, its a bit of a joke problem in a way coz its a bit unmotivatable after you do the trig sub (the usual neat solutions teachers have for it are just like, try this, magic it works). once youve done the...
  7. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    highly doubt ill come first, the grammar paper was really nice on me in particular and the markers were nice with some random oddities. got 83/84 for 3u
  8. largarithmic

    would i get full marks for this volumez question?

    I cant read the handwriting and I dont know the question, but I assume you would if you get the right answer and its not one of those "prove volume = something" questions you'd get full marks. Does anyone know if you need the preamble to do with \delta x etc? Like the limiting sum thing...
  9. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    yeah I initially forgot to end with [ /tex]
  10. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    I go to sydney grammar Suppose it had a repeated root w. Then taking the derivative, the following two are true: w^n - w^{n-1} = 1 nw^{n-1} - (n-1)w^{n-2} = 0 Note eqn (1) implies w is nonzero. From that we can divide by w^{n-2} in (2) to obtain: nw - (n-1) = 0 w = \frac{n-1}{n} < 1 Now...
  11. largarithmic

    HSC Mathematics Marathon

    w*w^2*w^3*...*w^{5k-1} = w^{1+2+...+5k-1} = w^{\frac{5k(5k-1)}{2}} = (w^5)^{\frac{k(5k-1)}{2}} = 1 and w+w^2+w^3+...+w^{5k-1} = \frac{w(w^{5k-1}-1)}{w-1} = \frac{w(\frac{w^{5k}}{w}-1)}{w-1} = \frac{w(\frac{1}{w}-1)}{w-1} = -1 So combining the answer is 2. Now try this question, it's from my...
  12. largarithmic

    Harder 3U question

    This thing has a massive problem with rigour towards the end of the sum. (The reasoning, take n->infinity and then just let the 1+k/n term be zero doesnt work when the k youre dealing with is really big). It's probably enough for HSC though. Also theres a minus sign wrong , should be 1 - (k-1)/n...
  13. largarithmic

    Complex numbers question

    You can look at this geometrically as well. If O is the origin, A represents z, and B represents z+1, and C represents 1, then because z has unit modulus (implied by z = cistheta), and because then AB has length 1 (try tail-to-tip addition or whatever) then OAB is isosceles. Another way of...
  14. largarithmic

    Locus Question

    You're missing a solution that you'd obtain from the 3(y+5) = -4(x-2) case (i.e. 4x + 3y + 7 = 0). Also you got the arithmetic wrong, -8-15= -23 :P
  15. largarithmic

    harder 3 Unit Inequalities question

    You dont need all that stuff listed earlier, you can do this question almost straight out using the AM-GM for two variables. \noindent (1-a)(1-b)(1-c) = (b+c)(a+c)(a+b) \ge (2\sqrt{bc})(2\sqrt{ac})(2\sqrt{ab}) = 8abc The first step is just using the a+b+c=1 condition, whereas the second step...
  16. largarithmic

    Complex No.

    Yep that's right.
  17. largarithmic

    Complex No.

    rawr try this Find the integral (dx) from 0 to 1 of [ln(1+x)]/(1+x^2) (sorry I dunno how to use latex)
  18. largarithmic

    Logarithms

    Is this question from a past SGS trial? It looks very familiar.
  19. largarithmic

    Probability

    It's not a paradox, it's probability zero. The problem is that "probability zero" and "never occurs" are not always equivalent statements when dealing with infinite sets. Similarly "probability 1" actually means "almost always occurs" rather than "always occurs", see...
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