Login

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

July 21, 2025, 01:04:17 am

Author Topic: VCE Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!  (Read 2546653 times)  Share 

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

lolalol

  • Victorian
  • Forum Regular
  • **
  • Posts: 75
  • Respect: +1
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3000 on: February 26, 2014, 08:48:06 pm »
0
Struggling to find the range in q8a, I understand that the domain is the domain of cos(x) but how do you find the range? Cheers in advance!
2013: French [45] Methods [42]
2014: Chemistry [45] English [47] Spesh [42] UMEP French [4.0]
ATAR: 99.85
Tutoring French and Chemistry in 2015! PM me for more details :)

brightsky

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3136
  • Respect: +200
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3001 on: February 26, 2014, 08:57:54 pm »
+2
okay so we have y = arcsin(cosx). the argument of arcsine can only be within the interval [-1, 1]. so we have cosx E [-1, 1], which is true for all x E R. but we are given that cosx is restricted to [0,pi], so the implied domain is [0,pi] as you stated. to find the range, we work backwards. x E [0,pi] so what is cosx between? sketch y = cosx over the interval [0,pi] and you'll find that cosx E [-1, 1]. so what is arcsin(cosx) between? we first sketch draw a special cartesian plane, with y as the vertical axis, and cosx as the horizontal axis. we sketch y = arcsin(cosx) over the domain cosx E [-1, 1]. your graph should look exactly the same as y = arcsin(x) except with cosx as the horizontal axis instead of x. as you can see from the graph, arcsin(cosx) E [-pi/2, pi/2]. so the implied range is [-pi/2,pi/2].
2020 - 2021: Master of Public Health, The University of Sydney
2017 - 2020: Doctor of Medicine, The University of Melbourne
2014 - 2016: Bachelor of Biomedicine, The University of Melbourne
2013 ATAR: 99.95

Currently selling copies of the VCE Chinese Exam Revision Book and UMEP Maths Exam Revision Book, and accepting students for Maths Methods and Specialist Maths Tutoring in 2020!

Kuroyuki

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 290
  • Respect: +6
  • School: MHS
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3002 on: February 26, 2014, 09:00:31 pm »
+1
Struggling to find the range in q8a, I understand that the domain is the domain of cos(x) but how do you find the range? Cheers in advance!
so you have the domain of cos x = 0 to pi
0 < or = x < = pi
take cos of everything
cos0 < or = cosx < or = cos pi
which gives the principal range of cos x to be
-1 < or = cos x < or = 1
then take arcsin of everything
so
arcsin(-1) < or = arcsin(cosx) < or = arcsin(1)
which will give
-pi on 2 < or = arcsin(cosx) < or = pi on 2
which is the range as arcsin(cosx) is the original function.
EDIT - made it a bit clearer i think, and i think brightsky's method is more reliable.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2014, 09:09:55 pm by Kuroyuki »
2013 : Accounting 48
2014 : Methods 49| Specialist 46 | Chemistry 37 | English 38| UMEP 4.0|
99.35

Tutoring methods and specialist in 2015
PM for details

RKTR

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 613
  • Respect: +17
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3003 on: February 28, 2014, 09:51:38 pm »
0
y=2-6/x  x=f(t) y=g(t) find f'(t) when y=1 given g'(t)=0.4

how to do this?o.o
2015-2017: Bachelor of Biomedicine (Neuroscience)
2018: Doctor of Medicine (Withdrawn)
2019: Bachelor of Commerce (Actuarial Studies?)

brightsky

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3136
  • Respect: +200
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3004 on: February 28, 2014, 09:57:24 pm »
+1
dy/dx = (dy/dt)*(dt/dx) = 6/x^2
when y = 1, g'(t) = dy/dt = 0.4 = 2/5
when y = 1, x = 6
plug into first equation:
(2/5)*(dt/dx) = 6/(6)^2
(2/5)*(dt/dx) = 1/6
dt/dx = 5/12
dx/dt = 12/5
since f'(t) = dx/dt, then f'(t) = 12/5.
2020 - 2021: Master of Public Health, The University of Sydney
2017 - 2020: Doctor of Medicine, The University of Melbourne
2014 - 2016: Bachelor of Biomedicine, The University of Melbourne
2013 ATAR: 99.95

Currently selling copies of the VCE Chinese Exam Revision Book and UMEP Maths Exam Revision Book, and accepting students for Maths Methods and Specialist Maths Tutoring in 2020!

RKTR

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 613
  • Respect: +17
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3005 on: February 28, 2014, 10:01:26 pm »
0
oh didnt know that y=g(t) then g'(t)=dy/dt

is it like y=f(x) so f'(x)=dy/dx ?
2015-2017: Bachelor of Biomedicine (Neuroscience)
2018: Doctor of Medicine (Withdrawn)
2019: Bachelor of Commerce (Actuarial Studies?)

brightsky

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3136
  • Respect: +200
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3006 on: February 28, 2014, 11:10:43 pm »
0
indeed. :)
2020 - 2021: Master of Public Health, The University of Sydney
2017 - 2020: Doctor of Medicine, The University of Melbourne
2014 - 2016: Bachelor of Biomedicine, The University of Melbourne
2013 ATAR: 99.95

Currently selling copies of the VCE Chinese Exam Revision Book and UMEP Maths Exam Revision Book, and accepting students for Maths Methods and Specialist Maths Tutoring in 2020!

alchemy

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1222
  • Respect: +25
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3007 on: March 01, 2014, 07:51:33 pm »
0
Is there a quick way to do this: (3x^2-6x+2)/((x-1)^2)(x+2)

kinslayer

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 761
  • Respect: +30
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3008 on: March 03, 2014, 10:25:43 pm »
0
Is there a quick way to do this: (3x^2-6x+2)/((x-1)^2)(x+2)

What do you need to do with it?

Also the way you wrote the brackets in the denominator is a little weird. Do you mean this?



or


alchemy

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1222
  • Respect: +25
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3009 on: March 03, 2014, 10:44:16 pm »
0
What do you need to do with it?

Also the way you wrote the brackets in the denominator is a little weird. Do you mean this?



or



Oh sorry, I forgot to mention what the question was. It was asking to split that expression into partial fractions. I'm doing it how the book suggested, and it ends up being excruciatingly long

kinslayer

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 761
  • Respect: +30
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3010 on: March 03, 2014, 10:54:44 pm »
0
Okay yeah I thought that might be it. Partial Fractions are usually pretty long to work out, but that one looks pretty standard.

Have a read of this page and see if it makes things any easier/clearer:

http://tutorial.math.lamar.edu/Classes/CalcII/PartialFractions.aspx

Otherwise if you think what you are doing isn't right then feel free to post it and someone can look over it:)

Sanguinne

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 265
  • Respect: 0
  • School: some public school
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3011 on: March 04, 2014, 07:48:45 pm »
0
How do I work out the asymptote other than x = 0 of y= (-x^2+1)/-2x.
2015: Biomed Unimelb

lzxnl

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3432
  • Respect: +215
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3012 on: March 04, 2014, 08:09:37 pm »
0
How do I work out the asymptote other than x = 0 of y= (-x^2+1)/-2x.
Your function is also x/2 - 1/2x if you divide through. As x becomes large positively or negatively, the -1/2x term becomes tiny until it becomes negligible and arbitrarily close to zero. Thus your asymptote is y = x/2
2012
Mathematical Methods (50) Chinese SL (45~52)

2013
English Language (50) Chemistry (50) Specialist Mathematics (49~54.9) Physics (49) UMEP Physics (96%) ATAR 99.95

2014-2016: University of Melbourne, Bachelor of Science, Diploma in Mathematical Sciences (Applied Maths)

2017-2018: Master of Science (Applied Mathematics)

2019-2024: PhD, MIT (Applied Mathematics)

Accepting students for VCE tutoring in Maths Methods, Specialist Maths and Physics! (and university maths/physics too) PM for more details

Cort

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 206
  • A tragedy of two interpretations.
  • Respect: +5
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3013 on: March 05, 2014, 04:16:50 pm »
0
Right, how do you do this?
Find the solutions of the equation z^4-2z^2+4=0 in polar form.

If it's fine, mind if you check if I did something wrong? Kinda stuck. Let t=z^2.
Hence t^2-2t+4=0
Used quad formula
t = 1 +- sqrt 3 i. Where do I go from here if I approached it from this way?

Thanks.
I actually have no idea what I'm saying or talking about.

nhmn0301

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 379
  • Respect: +15
  • School: The University of Melboure
  • School Grad Year: 2017
Re: Specialist 3/4 Question Thread!
« Reply #3014 on: March 05, 2014, 06:16:54 pm »
0
Right, how do you do this?
Find the solutions of the equation z^4-2z^2+4=0 in polar form.

If it's fine, mind if you check if I did something wrong? Kinda stuck. Let t=z^2.
Hence t^2-2t+4=0
Used quad formula
t = 1 +- sqrt 3 i. Where do I go from here if I approached it from this way?

Thanks.
Then you sub in each t value you have inside z^2 and solve again. From each value of t, you should able to get 2 values more. Hence, you end up with 4 values
Hope this helps!
2015-2017: Bachelor of Biomedicine