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Grey Council

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A problem for Victorling. For victorling, mind. hehe, i'll ask everyone else later, first give victorling a chance. :p

Find the complex number z with the lest positive argument satisfying the condition
| z - 25i | =< 15 __( in other words, modulus of z-25i is less than or equal to 15)

have fun! :D
 

victorling

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can anybody help me to reduce the size of the graph?
it is way too big!!!800kb, while it allows only 100kb
i used paint
 

Grey Council

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damn it, thats supposed to be hard! wtf, this is depressing. humph

hehe, victorling learnt to save in jpg format. ;) it went from 800kb to 20kb. lol
 
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KeypadSDM

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Dude, the question is astoundingly easy. Maybe you were attacking it the wrong way?

To size it down use jpeg format not BMP
 

victorling

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Originally posted by Grey Council
A problem for Victorling. For victorling, mind. hehe, i'll ask everyone else later, first give victorling a chance. :p

Find the complex number z with the lest positive argument satisfying the condition
| z - 25i | =< 15 __( in other words, modulus of z-25i is less than or equal to 15)

have fun! :D
 

victorling

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Use 15/25 = sin(alpha)

then alpha can be evaluated, which is....36.86989765 degrees, better change it into minute and second

then the least positive argument is 90-36.86989765=53.13010235degrees
 

victorling

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the modulus of the complex number we want = sqrt(25^2-15^2)=20
the argument is 53.13 degress
therefore the answer is 20cis(53.13degrees), better change the degree into minute and second...
 

KeypadSDM

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And you will also note that Tan^-1(4/3) gives you the required angle as well. Implying that the coordinates must be of the form 3a + 4ai
 

KeypadSDM

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Question.

Prove that all even numbers
n >= 6 (n <> 10) can be represented in the form:

p1 + p2p3

Where p1, p2, and p3 are primes.

:p
 
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Grey Council

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hokay, use victorling's diagram. we know |z| is 20 and we know theta. bring down a line from the point of contact parallel to the imaginary axis till it touches the real axis. You now have another right angled traingle. use r cos theta and r sin theta to find the coordinates. :)
 

J0n

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Originally posted by KeypadSDM
Question.

Prove that all even numbers
n >= 6 (n <> 10) can be represented in the form:

p1 + p2p3

Where p1, p2, and p3 are primes.

:p
Can't you just let p1 = 2 and say that p2*p3 can be represented by the product of two primes by the fundamental theorem of arithmetic? or am i horribly wrong, cause it seems too easy :(
 

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