lyounamu
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What's the point of asking if you don't have the answer?Timothy.Siu said:i've asked a few people and the answers i get range from 100k-500k....but now even less lol
What's the point of asking if you don't have the answer?Timothy.Siu said:i've asked a few people and the answers i get range from 100k-500k....but now even less lol
This is the technique used for questions involve placing 2 different sets of objects such that one set of objects must be separate from each other (such as placing 5 girls and 3 boys with all boys separate)Timothy.Siu said:do mine please
All the letters of the word ENCUMBRANCE are arranged in a line. Find the total number of arrangements, which contain all the vowels in alphabetical order but separated by at least one consonant.
to order the vowels, rather than treating them as different letters I would just straight away consider them as identitcal (since they can't be ordered), so to order them it is 8C4 rather than 8P4/2 (ie. it is the number of ways of choosing 4 of the 8 spots to have a vowel in them). this simplifies it a bit (still the same answer)cyl123 said:Now consider the spaces in between each consanent as a possible position to place a vowel, since in this way the vowels will be separated. There are 8 spaces in total (counting space outside each end. The vowels are A E U E.
So now only consider number of arrangement where vowels are separate not necessarily in alphabetical order. There are 4 letters to place so there are 8 spaces to place first letter, 7 spaces to place second letter and so on. There are 8P4/2 ways to do this (counting repetition)
Now note that there are 12 possible ways to arrange the letters A U E E in a straight line but only one arrangement is in alphabetical order. So when the letters are placed in the spaces, when ignoring the consonants, only 1 in 12 arrangements are in alphabetical order. Thus out of the 8P4/2 arrangements, only 1 in 12 are in alphabetical order.
Thus total number of arrangement = 7!/4*8P4/2*1/12 = 88200 arrangements.
i think this is right...
nup, i cant get a lead. Im sure its something small. Something to do with change of base maybe.Trebla said:Here's a random one
Prove that log23 is irrational.
log(2) 3 = ln(3)/ln(2)Trebla said:Here's a random one
Prove that log23 is irrational.
isnt that MX2...addikaye03 said:Question: ( to keep things going, its 4U tho)
a)If z1=1+i,z2=rt3-i, find the moduli and principal arguments of z1,z2 and z1/z2
b) If z=(1+i)/(rt3-i), find the smallest postive integer n such that z^n is real and evaluate z^n for this integer n.
so you are basically saying that p and q are irrational from there...azureus88 said:Suppose log(2) 3 is rational
then log(2)3=p/q
2^(p/q) = 3
2^p = 3^q
but LHS is even and RHS is odd so by contradiction, log(2)3 is irrational.
yeh, i think that's a great way to prove something is irrational - by contradiction with the p/q stuffazureus88 said:Suppose log(2) 3 is rational
then log(2)3=p/q
2^(p/q) = 3
2^p = 3^q
but LHS is even and RHS is odd so by contradiction, log(2)3 is irrational.
yeh he is, he missed a crutial step for ppl who havent seen a proof like this to understand it:lyounamu said:so you are basically saying that p and q are irrational from there...
Yes, that's very interesting. Answering using the notion of contradiciton seems very useful. I guess I will take that method on board, haha.Pwnage101 said:yeh, i think that's a great way to prove something is irrational - by contradiction with the p/q stuff
well done
(i would also add that p and q must be integers, q cannot = 0, and p & q have no common factors, if you wanted an even 'better' solution)
lol i still remember my first lesson of 3 unit maths in year 11...i had a great teacher, and the very first lesson he gave us all these definitions of rational numbers, etc then showed us the proof that e is irrational via that contradiction methodTrebla said:There are proofs that e and π are irrational as well using proof by contradication, but they are far more complicated than this lol (see Extension 2 HSC 2001 and 2003)