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First Year Mathematics B (Integration, Series, Discrete Maths & Modelling) (1 Viewer)

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Hi everyone, someone please help me out with this question. How did they turn the maclaurin series for 1/(x+1) into series 1/(x^2+1) just like that...



Just replace x with x^2. The series will be convergent for |x^2| < 1, i.e. -1 < x < 1.
 

iforgotmyname

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MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Just replace x with x^2. The series will be convergent for |x^2| < 1, i.e. -1 < x < 1.
Holy smokes, Thanks for the ultra fast reply.

I tried deriving the series, but didn't really work out very well cause everything is Zero, not sure what went wrong there.



And does it also mean that for 1/(1+x^3) you just need to replace x with x^3?
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Holy smokes, Thanks for the ultra fast reply.

I tried deriving the series, but didn't really work out very well cause everything is Zero, not sure what went wrong there.

Basically you should try and avoid having to derive the series unless you absolutely need to (or are specifically asked to). Just use well-known Taylor series to obtain the desired one if you can (like by replacing x with x^2 here).

Regarding your differentiations, I think you've misdifferentiated after some point. Like to get f"(x), f(3)(x), etc., we should be using the quotient rule.
 

iforgotmyname

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Basically you should try and avoid having to derive the series unless you absolutely need to (or are specifically asked to). Just use well-known Taylor series to obtain the desired one if you can (like by replacing x with x^2 here).

Regarding your differentiations, I think you've misdifferentiated after some point. Like to get f(3)(x), we should be using the quotient rule.
omg I did.... exam revision past 2 is not a good idea

thanks so much mate
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Holy smokes, Thanks for the ultra fast reply.

I tried deriving the series, but didn't really work out very well cause everything is Zero, not sure what went wrong there.



And does it also mean that for 1/(1+x^3) you just need to replace x with x^3?
Yep to get 1/(1+x^3), replace x with x^3.
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Can someone help me wrap my head around this sort of probability:

Question:


Answer (underlined things i don't understand):


So initially I just went 0.8 * (0.3 + 0.6). But that's wrong obviously.
 

iforgotmyname

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MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Can someone help me wrap my head around this sort of probability:

Question:


Answer (underlined things i don't understand):


So initially I just went 0.8 * (0.3 + 0.6). But that's wrong obviously.
Probability of a losing AND b OR c losing .3*.6 accounts for b and c losing at the same time
 

He-Mann

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Can someone help me wrap my head around this sort of probability:


Answer (underlined things i don't understand):


So initially I just went 0.8 * (0.3 + 0.6). But that's wrong obviously.
I think there is a type when they used Inclusion-Exclusion Principle.

Should be this P(C U D) = P(C) + P(D) - P(C n D)

Then by independence P(C n D) = P(C)xP(D)
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Question

A random variable Y is defined by Y = -2X + 3. Determine E(Y) and Var[(]Y).

I know how to do E() and Var(), but what do I do with the -2X + 3? Do I go, [-2(0) + 3]*0.2 + [-2(1) + 3]*1 + etc... when doing E()

also i was given the probability distribution of the random variable X before this
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Question

A random variable Y is defined by Y = -2X + 3. Determine E(Y) and Var[(]Y).

I know how to do E() and Var(), but what do I do with the -2X + 3? Do I go, [-2(0) + 3]*0.2 + [-2(1) + 3]*1 + etc... when doing E()
E is linear so E(Y) = -2E(X) + 3.

For variance, use the property that Var(aX + b) = a2 Var(X), where a and b are constants. So here, Var(Y) = (-2)2Var(X) = 4Var(X).
 

Mr_Kap

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

HEY. Im currently tilted with this:

So during a question i end up getting this:


What i cant grasp is how this is 4*sqrt(2)...even when i looked up the indefinite integral and tried subbing in i get ZERO...any help would be GREATLY APPRECIATED!
 
Last edited:

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

HEY. Im currently tilted with this:

So during a question i end up getting this:


What i cant grasp is how this is 4*sqrt(2)...even when i looked up the indefinite integral and tried subbing in i get ZERO...any help would be GREATLY APPRECIATED!
 

Mr_Kap

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Cheers for that. However could someone show me the working out as I'm still getting zero. :(
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

The main thing is that we need to split up the interval into cases based on where the thing in the absolute values is positive/negative in order to deal with the absolute values.
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

What's going on here:

[Integral sign] coshx (1 + sinh^2 x)dx

= sinhx + (sinh^3 x)/3


What did they do to get to that answer (where did the +1 go)?
 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

What's going on here:

[Integral sign] coshx (1 + sinh^2 x)dx

= sinhx + (sinh^3 x)/3


What did they do to get to that answer (where did the +1 go)?
Substitute u = sinh(x), so du = cosh(x) dx. Then the integral becomes

int (1+u^2) du = u + (u^3)/3 + c

= sinh(x) + (sinh^3 (x))/3 + c.
 

iforgotmyname

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

What's going on here:

[Integral sign] coshx (1 + sinh^2 x)dx

= sinhx + (sinh^3 x)/3


What did they do to get to that answer (where did the +1 go)?
=Int(Coshx+coshx*sinh^2x )

Since coshx*sinh^2x is of the form int(y'*y)
We can treat it as x^2 so int(x^2) is (x^3)/3

Thus Int(Coshx+coshx*sinh^2x )=sinhx+sinh^3x/3
 

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