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HSC 2016 MX2 Marathon ADVANCED (archive) (1 Viewer)

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dan964

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

Subtle, possibly very easy, not entirely sure. Without graphing the thing:

Prove thoroughly that
lim (1/n^R) as n --> infinity, and where R is a member of the reals, e.g. pi or e, or 3, etc. (and yes R>0)
is 0.

and R>0
 
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InteGrand

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

Subtle, possibly very easy, not entirely sure. Without graphing the thing:

Prove thoroughly that
lim (1/n^R) as n --> infinity, and where R is a member of the reals, e.g. pi or e, or 3, etc.
is 0.
 

KingOfActing

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level



However, if we're allowed to use L'Hospitals law:



Finally, another way which I just don't feel like typing up would be to prove that the function is monotone decreasing on (1,infinity) and note that it is bounded below by 0 (which is trivial, just note that the division of two positive numbers is positive).


EDIT: Note that R > 0
 
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Paradoxica

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level



However, if we're allowed to use L'Hospitals law:



Finally, another way which I just don't feel like typing up would be to prove that the function is monotone decreasing on (1,infinity) and note that it is bounded below by 0 (which is trivial, just note that the division of two positive numbers is positive).


EDIT: Note that R > 0
L'Hôpital's rule doesn't work here, because the expression does not reach indeterminate form.
 

KingOfActing

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

L'Hôpital's rule doesn't work here, because the expression does not reach indeterminate form.
Actually, L'Hospital's rule is applicable for f(x)/g(x) when f and g tend to 0, or |g(x)| tends to infinity.
 

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level





 

agha

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

 

Paradoxica

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

Do you know whether there is a closed-form answer, or can we just give our answer as an infinite series?
Show me your infinite series. I'm looking through my materials for a possible closed form.
 

seanieg89

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

I got an equivalent series and the same numerics as Integrand. Will spend a little time trying to evaluate it before posting.
 

InteGrand

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

May I ask how you derived this? My line of thinking did not lead to surds...
Here was my method (for obtaining the series).























 
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agha

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Re: HSC 2016 4U Marathon - Advanced Level

 
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