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HSC 2012 MX1 Marathon #1 (archive) (2 Viewers)

Carrotsticks

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

For Cambridge 3u Year 11, should I do the extension part? I'm finding it quite difficult though will the syllabus need me to do it?
Try a few of them. Although they may not appear in exams (I have only seen a couple appear in exams), it's the experience and the thought processes that you develop by doing them, that you have to gain. You can later use these in your exams.

You won't have time to attempt all the questions.
 

SpiralFlex

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

Try a few of them. Although they may not appear in exams (I have only seen a couple appear in exams), it's the experience and the thought processes that you develop by doing them, that you have to gain. You can later use these in your exams.



I'll race you after the HSC. Post worked solutions on BOS. :)
 

cutemouse

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

No. You were right the first time. It's 7/4. I made a silly mistake. But here is a different method:

Nice, but i think it's worth noting that the first line is only valid if the terms of the series are absolutely convergent.
 

Trebla

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

I'll race you after the HSC. Post worked solutions on BOS. :)
Good luck. :p This had been attempted a few years ago but failed miserably (it was even attempted as a team effort).
 

cutemouse

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

Good luck. :p This had been attempted a few years ago but failed miserably (it was even attempted as a team effort).
Teachers (and other people in general) become lazy when it comes to writing solutions, even to their own examinations... So go figure.
 

SpiralFlex

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

Good luck. :p This had been attempted a few years ago but failed miserably (it was even attempted as a team effort).
Do not worry, Spiral loves helping humans! I shall make work solutions and get them checked then post them. :)
 

tywebb

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

the first line is only valid if the terms of the series are absolutely convergent
And of course it is.



I didn't bother to put this in my solution because it is not required thesedays in HSC exams.

Exam committees and HSC marking teams would be in a lot of trouble if it was required to prove convergence (or absolute convergence) for a lot of HSC questions asked since 1980.
 
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nightweaver066

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

No. You were right the first time. It's 7/4. I made a silly mistake. But here is a different method:

This was what i was trying to do last night but didn't end up correct..

Why do you square the term on the left in the 2nd line?
 

bleakarcher

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

What did you do in line 2? I dont understand you did with the first term.
 

bleakarcher

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

^ Damn. How did you realise that?
 

tywebb

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

It's fairly standard. Don't your teachers teach you this stuff?
 

largarithmic

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

I haven't learnt this at school yet so it's interesting to me haha.

Thanks for clearing that up.
















New question..
8 choose 3 = something...

How about this gem: Prove, WITHOUT USING THE BINOMIAL THEOREM OR ANYTHING LIEK THAT, that
 

deterministic

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

8 choose 3 = something...

How about this gem: Prove, WITHOUT USING THE BINOMIAL THEOREM OR ANYTHING LIEK THAT, that
Is a combinatorial argument acceptable?

If so, then since:
= number of ways to choose n objects from 2n objects.
One way to do so is to split 2n objects into 2 groups with n objects in each (Doesn't matter how its done)
Consider number of ways of choosing k objects from group 1 and n-k objects in group 2 for k=0,1,..,n.
Add them together and equate with RHS to get result.
 

largarithmic

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Re: 2012 HSC MX1 Marathon

Is a combinatorial argument acceptable?

If so, then since:
= number of ways to choose n objects from 2n objects.
One way to do so is to split 2n objects into 2 groups with n objects in each (Doesn't matter how its done)
Consider number of ways of choosing k objects from group 1 and n-k objects in group 2 for k=0,1,..,n.
Add them together and equate with RHS to get result.
That was what I was looking for ^^

Anyway, geometry problem:



 

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