Re: HSC 2015 3U Marathon
Can anyone come up with a combinatoric proof for this one?
Can anyone come up with a combinatoric proof for this one?
Can you do this ?Can anyone come up with a combinatoric proof for this one?
After having a more deeper thought about this question last night. I decided to draw it out on the quadrant circleThe first helpful thing to notice, is that the range of the cosine inverse function is between and . This means we can't do the old method of cancelling out the inverse cosine and the cosine because this would give us which since is acute would not be valid since it is outside the range.
However, we can still try to apply this by manipulating the expression. First, to give a proper definition of the trick, remember that:
This is true precisely because of the definition of an inverse function, and precisely because that domain is the domain of the original function that we wish to 'invert'.
So proceeding from this, we want to manipulate the given expression into one in which we can use .
Remember that, and , which means
(To see this fact more clearly, imagine drawing horizontal lines in a y = cos x graph below the x-axis, and see that when the line intersects one part of the cosine graph, it intersects the opposite side, symmetrical to )
So that,
Your diagram is correct, but why is angle DBA 90 degrees?I am having trouble drawing this diagram for circle geometry.
"AB is a chord of a circle with centre O. The bisector of angle OAB meets the circle at D. Prove that OD||AB
BumpDifferentiate y = x^1/2 using first principles
I've done questions similar to these and I find that the only way to approach it is by rationalising the numerator (Once I've inserted everything into the first principles formula)
Can somebody confirm if there are any other ways to do these types of questions?
Thanks for clarifying!Not that I know of for d/dx sqrt(x) by first principles.
Best way to find out is to do the papersHey everyone I am just wandering how common are inverse functions in the paper? Like how many questions involving them will be in it?