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  1. seanieg89

    HSC 2012 MX1 Marathon #1 (archive)

    Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon $Define $f(x):=x^r$ for positive $x$ and real $r.\\$Then $f'(x)=rx^{r-1}$ and we have:$\\ \\r=f'(1)=\lim_{x\rightarrow 1^-}\frac{1-f(x)}{1-x}=\lim_{x\rightarrow 1^-}\frac{1-x^r}{1-x}$ and the result follows.$ Of course here we are assuming that the derivative of x^r...
  2. seanieg89

    Thankyou :).

    Thankyou :).
  3. seanieg89

    Polynomial notation

    Nope, I'm not even sure how it is proven. Its just a useful sledgehammer to know. What is this geometric interpretation?
  4. seanieg89

    Happy Birthday to Math Man

    Yeah I know Graham, he was doing honours with me last year. But 2nd year advanced tutes would only be taken by doctors and PhD students at least a couple of years in.
  5. seanieg89

    Happy Birthday to Math Man

    Unlikely, they would usually reserve such tutes for professors.
  6. seanieg89

    Happy Birthday to Math Man

    graduated last year but might be running tutorials/marking assignments in first sem :).
  7. seanieg89

    Polynomial notation

    Ah yes 4, my bad.
  8. seanieg89

    Polynomial notation

    Well largs definition probably just varies by a constant multiple to make it easier to write the elementary symmetric polynomials.
  9. seanieg89

    Polynomial notation

    I thought that sym. summation ran over ALL permutations of the variables? So \sum_{sym}ab=2(ab+ac+ad+bc+bd+cd) Probably just a matter of conventions...it makes Muirhead's inequality look nicer :).
  10. seanieg89

    Discriminant.

    For n=3, \Delta=(\alpha_1-\alpha_2)^2(\alpha_1-\alpha_3)^2(\alpha_2-\alpha_3)^2.
  11. seanieg89

    Surface area

    I especially like this part. I proved that the only nontrivial functions f satisfying this property are semicircles IF we further impose the smoothness condition of f being twice differentiable (using differential equations). Am unsure as to whether or not there are any pathological non-smooth...
  12. seanieg89

    Discriminant.

    Exactly what larg said, we are just talking about ordered pairs of integers. An alternate way of writing the same product is: \prod_{l=2}^n\left(\prod_{k=1}^{l-1} (\alpha_k-\alpha_l)^2\right). Thanks for the positive feedback on the question, I felt it might help students appreciate the...
  13. seanieg89

    Discriminant.

    Every \alpha_i is a complex root of P. By the FTOA, there are exactly n such roots, counting multiplicity. The convention here is to take the sum/product over all pairs of positive integers (k,l) with 0<k<l \leq n. (This is a fairly common notation for sums and products.)
  14. seanieg89

    Discriminant.

    Yep. This is an algebraic derivation of that result that generalises to higher degree polynomials (although it turns out that the discriminant is not as useful for them).
  15. seanieg89

    Discriminant.

    Attached is the Q8 of an exam I wrote for a student, some of you may find it interesting...enjoy :).
  16. seanieg89

    Merry Christmas from Math Man

    That just implies that z lies on some circular arc containing w, z+w and the circumcentre of O, w and z+w.
  17. seanieg89

    Merry Christmas from Math Man

    w does not have to be the centre of the original circle. see largs counterexample. EDIT. And if we add that assumption, the problem is completely trivial as we have: |w|=|z|=|w-z|.
  18. seanieg89

    Question 8

    Haha win.
  19. seanieg89

    Question 8

    I always found that name confusing because there is also a "Ham and Cheese Sandwich Theorem" in measure theory.
  20. seanieg89

    hardest hsc exam? o.O

    I cannot recall exactly, would have to dig up my sisters book somewhere. (It is an ancient book now, all badly typeset etc. If I find time tomorrow I will take a photo of the page...)
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