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HSC 2015 MX1 Marathon (archive) (1 Viewer)

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InteGrand

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Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon

Tjanks I didn't know that rule about cos (x +\alpha)) being equal to cos (x - \alpha)
This isn't true for all x, just some special x. Sy123 was saying .

We can also see this graphically as the cosine function's graph is symmetric about the line .

In fact, it is symmetric about any vertical line going through its peaks of troughs (i.e. +1 or -1). This is at , for any integer , so we can say . A lot of similar identities can be derived for the cosine and related functions by looking at their graphs like this.
 

Speed6

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Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon

X is also in a cylic quad meaning that once we do angle sum of a triangle for that top part, we can do 180- (180-70-30), do we agree?

We could also do co-interior, many ways in doing this question tbh, but it shouldn't take more than 2 lines.
 

Speed6

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Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon




3 MARKS
 
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DatAtarLyfe

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Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon

X is also in a cylic quad meaning that once we do angle sum of a triangle for that top part, we can do 180- (180-70-30), do we agree?

We could also do co-interior, many ways in doing this question tbh, but it shouldn't take more than 2 lines.
Use that. Then once you know that angle (lets call it alpha), alpha + X = 180 (opposite angles in a cyclic quadrilateral are supplementary)
Therefore X = 180 - alpha
 

Drsoccerball

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Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon

2.
Compare coeficients of x^{k+1}
 
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