chinkyeye
Member
wtf..please explain liek simplyer bro
sec(x) = 1/cos(x)chinkyeye said:hey i need help do not understand this trig identity.. HSC PAST PPER 2004 Q9a i
"consider the GP 1 - tan^2"theta" + tan^4"theta"...when is da limitngsum exists, find its value in simplest form... i done all da steps, buti don' understand last line of working..their last line is 1/sec^2"theta" and then jumps to da anwser of cos^2"theta" wtf pelase explain
Hey! You changed the question!skyrockets1530 said:y=xe^x
y' = e^x(1+x)
y'' = e^x(2+x)
let y'' = 0 to find point of inflexion
0 = e^x(2+x)
therefore x = -2
point of inflexion at (-2,-2e^-2)
next question
find the equation of the curve that is always concave upwards with a stationary point at -1,2 and y-intercept = 3
haha, yea, sorry bout that- was doing it myself and came out with a negative answer, so either i made a mistake in my working or the question, but by all means post an answer if u did one, the question was: find the volume when the curve y=ln(x^2 + 2x) is rotated about the y-axis between y=2 and y=1 is it actually do-able?icycloud said:Hey! You changed the question!
Edit: Oops, just read your edit reason.
Yes it's doable, but I don't think it's 2U standard, or even 3U for that matter .skyrockets1530 said:haha, yea, sorry bout that- was doing it myself and came out with a negative answer, so either i made a mistake in my working or the question, but by all means post an answer if u did one, the question was: find the volume when the curve y=ln(x^2 + 2x) is rotated about the y-axis between y=2 and y=1 is it actually do-able?
Riviet said:Next question: find the derivative of (x2+2)(5-x3)
thanks, just found my mistake though, i think it is 2U do-able... making x the subject then integrating, as you mention in the first way u say to do it produces an answer, whether its correct or not it hard to say, but it seems right 7.1pi is what i ended up withicycloud said:Yes it's doable, but I don't think it's 2U standard, or even 3U for that matter .
You can either integrate:
pi * e^y + 1 +/- 2 Sqrt(e^y+1) + 1 dx
bounds: y = 1, y = 2
or you can integrate:
pi * (ln(x^2+2x))^2 dx
bounds: x = +/- Sqrt(e+1) - 1 and x = +/- Sqrt(e^2+1) - 1
using integration by parts (taught in 4U)
Either way, don't think it's a 2U question
Next Question: The length of an arc is 8.9cm and the area of the sector is 24.3cm2 when an angle of @ is subtended at the centre of the circle. Find the area of the minor segment cut off by @, correct to 1 decimal place.
skyrockets1530 said:next question: find the area enclosed between y=sqrt(x) and y = x3
skyrockets1530 said:next question: find the area enclosed between y=sqrt(x) and y = x3
Answer: Warning, my way is a really long and drawn out method. Please see skyrockets way below, which is what you should be doing. I didn't see the simplification when I wrote the answer below...word. said:Question 63
Integrate 3/Sqrt{e^x} dx