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right i see, thanks for helping me out!!for q4, let the LHS = Rsin(theta + alpha). You will find 5sin(theta + tan^-1(4/3) = 5, so sin(theta + tan^-1(4/3) = 1. The new bounds are tan^-1(4/3) < x < 2pi + tan^-1(4/3). There is only one solution within these bounds (in the first quadrant).
thanks!I could only do q10 with a brute force approach/ I'd never get this and there's probably a better way I can't think of right now.
So:
different permutations.
Now, let's consider all the square number that are available: 1, 4, 9, 25, 36, 64, 81, 100, 121, 144.
If we break down each square number into factors:
Total:
[+1]
[+3] - Three different ways to make this.
[+0] - We've already counted this.
[+3] - Three different ways for each different combination.
[+0] - We've already counted this.
[+6] - Three different ways for each different combination.
- Not possible
[+1]
- Not enough places to make anything.
[+3] - Three different ways to make this.
- Not possible
[+3] - Three different ways for each different combination.
Total number of permutations:
Since this is higher than all other options, then there must be a few we missed later with higher numbers.
Hence, D