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Cambridge Prelim MX1 Textbook Marathon/Q&A (2 Viewers)

appleibeats

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

For part c) of the same question:

Find the point V where the tangent is horizontal. Show that M is vertically above or below V and twice as far from the x-axis. Sketch the situation.

I have found Point V: (a + b /2 , -1/4 a(a-b)^2)

I know that M and V have the same x coordinates so is either vertically above or below.

Not sure how to show it is twice as far from the x - axis.

I know that point M has x coordinate a + b / 2

I think I am meant to find the y coordinate for point M but subbing x coordinate into the function will give me point V, won't it?
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread





 
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appleibeats

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Q4

Find i) the local maxima or minima and ii) the global maximum and minim of the funciton y = x^4 -8x^2 + 11 on each of the domains:

a) 1 less than or equal to x less than or equal to 3.

I have found the global max = 11 and global min = 4

But why is the boundary point which = local maxima ??

Are boundary points excluded??
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread



Global maximum: No global maximum as the curve approaches ∞ as x approaches ∞ and -∞.
Global minimum: f(x)=-5 when x=2 or -2.
Local maximum: f(x)=20 when x=3.
Local minimum: f(x)=-5 when x=2.

But why is the boundary point which = local maxima ??
Are boundary points excluded??
Not sure what you mean by this.
 

InteGrand

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Q4

Find i) the local maxima or minima and ii) the global maximum and minim of the funciton y = x^4 -8x^2 + 11 on each of the domains:

a) 1 less than or equal to x less than or equal to 3.

I have found the global max = 11 and global min = 4

But why is the boundary point which = local maxima ??

Are boundary points excluded??


Global maximum: No global maximum as the curve approaches ∞ as x approaches ∞ and -∞.
Global minimum: f(x)=-5 when x=2 or -2.
Local maximum: f(x)=20 when x=3.
Local minimum: f(x)=-5 when x=2.


Not sure what you mean by this.
They asked for the local and global extrema on the domain 1 ≤ x ≤ 3. So we only focus on the curve in this domain, in other words, sketch only the emboldened part of rand_althor's graph.

So the answers are:

Global maximum: 20 (obtained at the endpoint x = 3).
Global minimum: -5 (obtained at x = 2 )
Local maximum: none in the domain
Local minimum: -5 (obtained at x = 2).
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

They asked for the local and global extrema on the domain 1 ≤ x ≤ 3. So we only focus on the curve in this domain, in other words, sketch only the emboldened part of rand_althor's graph.

So the answers are:

Global maximum: 20 (obtained at the endpoint x = 3).
Global minimum: -5 (obtained at x = 2 )
Local maximum: none in the domain
Local minimum: -5 (obtained at x = 2).
Ah okay, apologies for the wrong answers appleibeats.
 

appleibeats

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Not sure how to find the horizontal asymptote of

y = x / (x^2 + 1)^1/2
 

VBN2470

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

We have a function f defined by as . Check this graphically.

(Note that f(x) > 0 when x > 0 and f(x) < 0 when x < 0 and that f is an odd function)
 
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appleibeats

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Are you dividing the numerator and denominator by x^2 ?? Does the square root in the denominator matter?? Or can you just ignore it, when finding the power of x to divide by.
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Is this correct for x<0?

 

InteGrand

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Is this correct for x<0?

Yes.

(Or we can just do the analysis for positive x and then use the fact that the function is odd to reduce the asymptote for negative x).
 

appleibeats

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

How do you find the asymptote if there was no x in the numerator, instead just the number 1.

y = 1 / (x^2 + 1)^1/2
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

For x>0:

 
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InteGrand

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Or just note that the denominator tends to infinity as , so the overall fraction (and hence the function) approaches 0, since .
 

calebwhitaker199

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

Hey guys, I need a hand with 22 and 24 please. If you could show working that would help a lot.
The answer for 22 is a) 8x^2 +9y-72=0
B ) (0,(247/32)), y=265/32
and 24) x^2 + 4x+8y-20=0
 

rand_althor

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

22)





24)

 
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DatAtarLyfe

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Re: Year 11 Mathematics 3 Unit Cambridge Question & Answer Thread

24/ Using the standard equation (x-h)^2 = 4a(y-k) where (h,k) is your vertex, you get (x+2)^2 = 4a(y-3)
To solve for a, sub in the point (2,1), you get (2+2)^2 = 4a(1-3)
4^2 = -8a
16 = -8a
a = -2
Sub it back into the equation and expand:
(x+2)^2 = -8(y-3)
x^2 + 4x + 4 = -8y +24
x^2 + 4x + 8y - 20 = 0
Q.E.D
 

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