Please revive this!
I would love more questions to come along, some of them albeit hard are fun to do, and it excercise obscure math techniques.
Please revive this!
I would love more questions to come along, some of them albeit hard are fun to do, and it excercise obscure math techniques.
'An art, which has an aim to achieve the beauty, is called a philosophy or in the absolute sense it is named wisdom.'- Al Farabi
Geometry:
Consider a circular ring of radius R.
A stick of length k such thatis placed within this circle so it becomes a 'chord'.
The stick is then 'spun' around inside the circle such that the two ends of the stick are always touching the circumference of the circle.
Find the area of the shape created by the midpoint of the stick once it's made a full rotation.
Algebra:
Determine all real values of X and Y satisfying the following system of equations:
University students/Postgrads: Please refrain from answering, as tempting as it may be.
Bachelor of Science (Adv. Mathematics) - University of Sydney:
Here's my attempt:
The midpoint will make a smaller circle concentric with the original circle in the diagram. To find the radius of this circle, we use pythagoras.
Let's join the centre of the circle to the midpoint of the line and join the centre of the circle to the end of the line to form a right angled triangle. The hypotenuse is R (the radius of the original circle) and the base is half the length of the line, which is. Hence the radius of the smaller circle is:
The area of the smaller circle is thus:
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Welcome to the New Age
Bachelor of Science (Adv. Mathematics) - University of Sydney:
The reason I knew it was a circle was because instead of spinning the chord around the circle, I spun the circle around the chord.
So I let the chord be fixed, and rotated the circle, and obviously from this the midpoint will make a circle since the centre of the circle is fixed, and the midpoint is fixed, hence they are always the same distance apart and thus the locus is a circle.
But I'll try a more rigorous proof if necessary.
Last edited by RealiseNothing; 23 May 2012 at 4:43 PM.
Welcome to the New Age
This may be easy, or it may be hard. I just came up with it then, so not sure how difficult it is.
Given a quadrilateral with two of it's sides of length 4 and 4, perimeter of 24, and area of, find the length of the two unknown sides. All four corners of the quadrilateral are equidistant from some point inside the shape.
Last edited by RealiseNothing; 25 May 2012 at 9:56 PM.
Welcome to the New Age
Hint: Use this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmagupta's_formula.
Welcome to the New Age
is this some 4u shit?
A hint for the first two number theory questions I posted on the previous page. Consider the prime factors of squares and try to use properties of prime numbers.
Currently studying:
PhD (Pure Mathematics) at ANU
oh god, how did I end up on this side of bos?
brb, running back to nonschool
I won't give up on us
Sorry been a bit busy lately. Here's a quick problem for the mean time.
A ball of radius 1 is 'dropped' into the parabola y=x^2. Find the centre of the circle.
EXTENSION: Same as above, but for the parabola![]()
Bachelor of Science (Adv. Mathematics) - University of Sydney:
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