Cool problem of the day! (1 Viewer)

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I'm assuming that means sit snugly inside the parabola? OMG I JUST SOLVED IT!! SO HAPPY WTF OMG HAHHAHAHAHA. I feel...so smart...yet among some of these questions...

The general equation of a circle is . Here . Solving simultaneously the parabola and circle, . As the solution is a double root, the discriminant equals 0. . . The circle has centre .

By a similar process, the centre of the circle in the parabola is (Different k to top one)
 
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qwerty44

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This thread is practically dead, so thought I might post a question. But unlike many of the others posted so far, a 2U student can do it.

 

ismeta

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1? :) I didn't use any particular mathematical method to do it, though.
 

Sy123

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This thread is practically dead, so thought I might post a question. But unlike many of the others posted so far, a 2U student can do it.





I think the conclusion is that a can indeed equal to b, but you gave us restricted boundaries, so yeah heh.
 

qwerty44

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The curves are arcs of circles whose centers are vertices of the square, side 6cm. Find the area of the shaded region.
 

Carrotsticks

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Here's a question I posted a while ago but I don't remember if anybody answered it (don't think so). Best done by the interested and well-read HSC student.

I am standing at the origin. I move to the right by one unit, then up by 1/2, then left by 1/3, then down by 1/4, then right again by 1/5 etc etc.

If I continue this infinitely, is there a coordinate I will (eventually) reach? If so, what is it?

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Another:

I am a 1-Dimensional person (so 1 degree of freedom). This means I can only either move forwards or backwards.

I move forward 1 unit, then backward 1/2 units, then forward 1/3 units, then backwards 1/4 units etc etc.

If I continue this infinitely, is there a coordinate I will (eventually) reach? If so, what is it?

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Another:

Consider a regular n-gon. What is the total number of m-gons (not necessarily regular) that I can make such that m < n ? (careful about rotational symmetry).
 

Carrotsticks

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Yep! Methinks that is a really cool result. No doubt if you could the first, then the second is trivial. Try going up 1 more dimension to 3D.
 

IamBread

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Yeah, and it was a lot of fun to do too. I am doing the first one now, so far got the z direction coordinate to be
 

Fus Ro Dah

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Consider a regular n-gon. What is the total number of m-gons (not necessarily regular) that I can make such that m < n ? (careful about rotational symmetry).
I like this question. The hardest part is finding a closed expression for the sum that determines the number of m-gons. I think a good Extension 2 student should be able to do so if they play around a bit with Complex Numbers. I will post a solution later if nobody else does.
 

Fus Ro Dah

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The curves are arcs of circles whose centers are vertices of the square, side 6cm. Find the area of the shaded region.
I know this question can be done by elementary means by partitioning various areas, but is it possible to evaluate it using calculus?

 

Carrotsticks

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Pretty sure it can be done using the transformation formula you have there (by perhaps mapping it out to a triangular domain) but then you would need to find the points of intersections etc, which would be quite tedious.
 

qwerty44

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Found a pretty good one that most 2U students should try.


Find the area of the rectangle.
 

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