You sure are asking a lot of exact value questions!
\frac{\sqrt 3}{2} \times \frac{1}{2} - \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{\sqrt 3}{2} = 0
Another way of doing this is recognising the Compound Angle formula for cos(a+b), which gives us cos(30+60)=cos(90), which is equal to 0.
No worries :)
Now your function for m in terms of x and y is actually incorrect. What you have there implies that the line goes through the origin, but that is not necessarily the case.
No, that is not the exact value. You just simplified the expression.
\frac{1 + \sqrt 3}{1 - \sqrt 3} = \frac{(1+\sqrt 3)^2}{-2} = \frac{4 + 2 \sqrt 3 }{-2} = -(2 + \sqrt 3)
Yes it can be equal to zero. Please refer to my example of the case where the line is in the form y=mx and passing through the given point. I answered the question according to what was given, and there was no such specification that x>0 and y>0. If I got this question in an exam and the marker...
I don't understand all this confusion. Who cares how ATAR is calculated? Just study your best and let the UAC worry about the ATAR for you. Suppose you knew everything about how the ATAR is calculated, and even knew the scaling formula despite it being kept a secret by the UAC. Does this affect...
Ummm.... the shortest hypotenuse is simply h=0 as per the case when the equation of the line is 8y=243x.
Did you mean the positive x and positive y axis?
Think about where \frac{\sqrt{5}-1}{2} comes from. What degree is the polynomial from which it came?
Also I'm not really sure if this disc is the maximal disc of which the solutions exist outside.
Your solution is essentially correct, but I think it's not explained very well. For example when using the Limiting Sum, you could have added that we can use it since |z|<1 rather than jumping directly into it. Also I think proofs should be such that even the average student could understand it...
Yeah I've lost marks too for small things like forgetting to put a dx when integrating w.r.t x or whatnot. Most recently, I took a bit of a gamble just to see what would happen. At school right now we finished Co-ordinate Geometry and it was examined a few weeks ago for our 2 unit test. The last...