• Best of luck to the class of 2024 for their HSC exams. You got this!
    Let us know your thoughts on the HSC exams here
  • YOU can help the next generation of students in the community!
    Share your trial papers and notes on our Notes & Resources page
MedVision ad

3u Mathematics Marathon v2.0 (1 Viewer)

P

pLuvia

Guest
07er's you are so inactive in the maths forums unlike the previous years :p So to stop that (I hope)

Time to start this again, point of this thread is to test each other's maths skills, general revision etc.

General rule: A person posts up a question (not homework-help questions) and then another person answers it in spoilers and after they answer they put up another question for the next person to answer (thank you webby!)

How to do spoilers : [spoiler ]Like this[/spoiler ], but without the spaces in between the brackets so without it, it would be something like this
Like this

I'll start off to get the ball rolling, last question from the previous marathon

Question

If a>b and c>d prove that ac+bd>ad+bc

Edit: Scrapped that question. don't think it was possible with 3u methods
 
Last edited by a moderator:

webby234

Member
Joined
Nov 14, 2005
Messages
361
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Re: 3u Mathematics Marathon 2.0

Just something you didn't mention - the person who answers the question posts a new one for others to solve.
 

onebytwo

Recession '08
Joined
Apr 19, 2006
Messages
823
Location
inner west
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
hey nice first question pluvia, looks familiar, its the one we encountered in mondays tute! lol
 
P

pLuvia

Guest
Re: 3u Mathematics Marathon 2.0

There has already been a question posted so please do not post another one until the previous one has been answered, that's what happened in the last 2u marathon and it got messy ;)

onebytwo said:
hey nice first question pluvia, looks familiar, its the one we encountered in mondays tute! lol
You in my tute? dammit I got to find out who you are lol

Looks like the one in our tute but I just randomly made one up using that question we had :)
 

Mark576

Feel good ...
Joined
Jul 6, 2006
Messages
515
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
I'm only in year 11 btw:

ac + bd > ad + bc

ac - ad > bc - bd

a(c-d) > b(c-d) (able to divide by (c-d) since c > d and therefore (c-d) is positive)

a>b, which is true, therefore ac +bd > ad + bc

Not sure if that's correct, probably isn't lol. From what has been said above this method seems too easy.

Here's the next question: (mind you, it's year 11)

Prove that x^2 +xy + y^2 > 0 for any non-zero values of x and y.

Remember to put in the spoilers!
 
Last edited by a moderator:

LoneShadow

Uber Procrastinator
Joined
May 24, 2004
Messages
877
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
here's a "solution"...did not spend time thinking. It might be wrong. I just wanted to do it like most year 11 kids would do:

Let f(x) = x^2+yx+y^2
Using the quadratic formula: x = (-y+/-Sqrt[-3y^2])/2.
But -3y^2<0 always. hence f(x) has no roots. and since it's a positive quadratic, it's always greater than zero.

someone post the right answer!:p
 

SoulSearcher

Active Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2005
Messages
6,757
Location
Entangled in the fabric of space-time ...
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Mark576 said:
Here's the next question: (mind you, it's year 11)

Prove that x^2 +xy + y^2 > 0 for any non-zero values of x and y.
Long time I've done one of these marathons, gonna have a go at this:
Consider:
x3-y3 = (x-y)(x2+xy+y2)

When x > y,
x3-y3 is positive,

x-y is positive, and thus

x2+xy+y2 is positive.

When y > x,
x3-y3 is negative,

x-y is negative, and thus

x2+xy+y2 is positive.

Therefore x2+xy+y2 > 0 for non-zero values of x and y.

I'm not completely sure that is correct, but if there's an error, then anybody else is free to correct it.

Next question:
When a polynomial is divided by x-p, the remainder is p3. WHen the polynomial is divided by x-q, the remainder is q3. Find the remainder when the polynomial is divided by (x-p)(x-q).
 

Mark576

Feel good ...
Joined
Jul 6, 2006
Messages
515
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Very nice solution soulsearcher, but you could also say this:

we know that x^2 and y^2 are greater than 0, and that x^2 +2xy + y^2 > 0, so:
(x^2 +y^2)/2 +((x+y)^2)/2 > 0, simplifying this, it becomes:
x^2 + xy + y^2 > 0
 

bos1234

Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2006
Messages
491
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
SoulSearcher said:
Next question:
When a polynomial is divided by x-p, the remainder is p3. WHen the polynomial is divided by x-q, the remainder is q3. Find the remainder when the polynomial is divided by (x-p)(x-q).
P(x)=(x-p)(x-q).Q(x) + ax + b
P(p)=ap+ b=p^3
p(q)=aq+b=q^3

equating simlutaneously,
ap-aq=p^3-q^3
a=(p-q)(p^2+pq+q^2)/(p-q)
a=p^2+pq+q^2
b=-p^2q-pq^2

therefore ax+b = R(x) = p^2+pq+q^2-p^2q-pq^2

Is this right or wrong? if wrong please correct!

question:

A finance company has agreed to pay a retired couple a pension of $15,000 per year for the next twenty years, indexed to inflation which is 3 1/2 percent per annum.


(a)How much will the company have paid the couple at the end of the twenty years?


(b) Immediately after the tenth annual pension payment is made, the finance company increases the indexewd rate to 4 percent per annum to mathc the increased inflation rate.
Given these new cond., how much will the company have paid the coiple at the end of twenty years?

year 12 - 3 unit qn.
 
Last edited:
P

pLuvia

Guest
You are allowed to post any level of questions in here except they just have to be within the 3u level, year 11 or year 12 are permitted
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top