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IB Maths Marathon (2 Viewers)

InteGrand

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016



























Is that right?
If we sub. in x = pi/2 to the final answer, since sin(pi/2) = 1, we get -32 + 72 -24 + 5 = 21, which is outside the range of the LHS, which is sin(5x), which is between -1 and 1 always.

This is the check that parad0xica mentioned in an earlier comment.
 
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davidgoes4wce

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Maths HL Introductory Problem:



My thinking was to integrate the circumference of a circle in order to get the area of a circle.
 

InteGrand

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Maths HL Introductory Problem:



My thinking was to integrate the circumference of a circle in order to get the area of a circle.
Yeah that's essentially one way to do it. The typical HSC method would be to do something like integrate sqrt(r^2 - x^2) between 0 and r (this getting the area of the quarter-disk), and then multiplying by 4. The integration would be carried out using a trig. substitution (or you could use integration by parts but for that definite integral, trig. sub. is nicer).
 

InteGrand

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Something like

Pretty much. And the area of a circle of radius 0 is 0, which makes C = 0. Not sure how rigorous you are required to be though with regards to explaining the integral.

Here's a paper discussing when the perimeter of a shape will be the derivative of its area, or area the derivative of volume: https://www.math.byu.edu/~mdorff/docs/DorffPaper07.pdf .
 
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davidgoes4wce

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016



I was a bit confused on this Introductory Question in Maths HL on Differentiation page 527 of Cambridge.

Im thinking the function is



We have to use differentiation and set to some value to solve for v.

Anyone with any ideas to get a kick start to this question?
 

InteGrand

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016



I was a bit confused on this Introductory Question in Maths HL on Differentiation page 527 of Cambridge.

Im thinking the function is



We have to use differentiation and set to some value to solve for v.

Anyone with any ideas to get a kick start to this question?
 

davidgoes4wce

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Im not much of a Physics person but just found this definition of magnetic dipole: "A magnetic dipole is the limit of either a closed loop of electric current or a pair of poles as the dimensions of the source are reduced to zero while keeping the magnetic moment constant."

Im going to say the magnetic dipole is not 2 since the average of those values is 2.000 0012
 

InteGrand

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Im not much of a Physics person but just found this definition of magnetic dipole: "A magnetic dipole is the limit of either a closed loop of electric current or a pair of poles as the dimensions of the source are reduced to zero while keeping the magnetic moment constant."

Im going to say the magnetic dipole is not 2 since the average of those values is 2.000 0012
That's still pretty close to 2, isn't it?
 

davidgoes4wce

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon 2016

Not sure if there are any IB markers in here but I came across a question like this tonight, which is equivalent to a Band 5 HSC question:

'A circular disc is cut into twelve sectors whose angles are in an arithmetic sequence. The angle of the largest sector is twice the angle of the smallest sector. Find the size of the angle of the smallest sector.'

The answer was 20 degrees, I used the answer in radians which was

Would I get penalized if I left my answer in radians , even though it didn't specifically mention either?
 

dan964

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon

***Renaming this thread since it is 2017, and stickying it for easy access***
 

davidgoes4wce

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Re: International Baccalaureate Marathon

Just confirming this was an error from TZ1 Mathematics Standard SL 2015 paper.

I learnt something new today , TZ1 is the Americas time zone.

 

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