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  1. leehuan

    MATH1081 Discrete Maths

    Yes, you need to use the inclusion exclusion principle.
  2. leehuan

    MATH2601 Higher Linear Algebra

    Oops. Nah I think that was just a typo as I typed it on the forums
  3. leehuan

    MATH2601 Higher Linear Algebra

    I feel bad lol. I had the same idea as InteGrand, I just mucked up my matlab input when I went to check my answer _______________ \text{Is this identity true?}\\ \text{proj}_W\textbf{v} = \textbf{v} - \text{proj}_{W^\perp}\textbf{v}
  4. leehuan

    MATH2601 Higher Linear Algebra

    A=\begin{pmatrix}3 &-1&2\\ -1&3&2\\ 2&2&0\end{pmatrix} \text{Found in part iv): }A=QDQ^T\text{ where }\\ Q=\begin{pmatrix}\frac{1}{\sqrt3} & \frac{1}{\sqrt2} & -\frac{1}{\sqrt5}\\ \frac{1}{\sqrt3} & -\frac{1}{\sqrt2} & -\frac{1}{\sqrt 6}\\ \frac{1}{\sqrt 3}& 0 & \frac{2}{\sqrt6}\end{pmatrix}\\...
  5. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    Oh, now that I think about it could it potentially be x(x^2-pi^2)?
  6. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    f:[-\pi, \pi]\to \mathbb{R}\text{ satisfied }f(-x)=-f(x), \, f(\pi)=0, \, f^{\prime\prime\prime}(x) = -6 \text{Proven in b): The relevant Fourier series is}\\ Sf(x) = \sum_{k=1}^\infty \frac{12(-1)^k}{k^3}\sin(kx) c) Give a simple formula for f(x) \text{Proven in a): }...
  7. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    I suppose what's really bugging me is the fact that d) is actually asking to explain why b) is true. Looks like more of just a grind rather than testing some nice stuff but I suppose I'll just have to deal with it.
  8. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    Goes back up to the above query I suppose. Is the only way of really proving it formally just to brute those second order derivatives?
  9. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    Oh, that was done in a previous part. I understand your point there... ...albeit this was the question. It's the last part that's of interest.
  10. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    Maybe it was just my unwillingness to compute any second order partial derivatives because the first order partial derivatives were thoroughly untidy. Is there any easy way of contradicting the criteria of Clairaut's theorem then?
  11. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    \text{Trying to prove that the mixed partial theorem doesn't hold for this function}\\ f(x,y)=\begin{cases}0&\text{ if }(x,y)=(0,0)\\ \frac{xy(x^2-y^2)}{x^2+y^2}&\text{otherwise}\end{cases} \text{But I thought that }f, f_x\text{ and }f_y\text{ are continuous here?}
  12. leehuan

    MATH2901 Higher Theory of Statistics

    Whoops. That went over my head.
  13. leehuan

    MATH2901 Higher Theory of Statistics

    f,g\text{ are increasing functions and }X,Y\text{ are i.i.d. r.v.s} \text{RTP: }(f(X) - f(Y))(g(X) - g(Y)) \ge 0
  14. leehuan

    MATH2601 Higher Linear Algebra

    Where does the inspiration come from that it just happens to be the image that satisfy this criteria o.O
  15. leehuan

    MATH2601 Higher Linear Algebra

    V\text{ is a finite dimensional V.S. over }\mathbb{C}\text{ and }T:V\to V\text{ is linear} \\\text{Suppose }T^2 = T = T^*\text{ (i.e. idempotent and self-adjoint)}\\ \text{Prove that there exists a subspace of }W\text{ such that }\\ T(\textbf{v}) = \text{proj}_{W}\textbf{v} My approach thus...
  16. leehuan

    MATH1081 Discrete Maths

    Re: Discrete Maths Sem 2 2016 It depends on what the graph looks like. The way you described it is quite arbitrary, because all 3 edges could just be joining two vertices. Or even, all three edges are loops on one single vertex.
  17. leehuan

    Statistics Marathon & Questions

    Re: Statistics Does sure convergence necessarily imply every other form of convergence?
  18. leehuan

    MATH2111 Higher Several Variable Calculus

    Re: Several Variable Calculus Can someone compute the directional derivative at (0,0) of this function? f(x,y) = \begin{cases}\frac{xy^2}{x^2+y^4} & \text{if }x\neq 0\\ 0&\text{otherwise}\end{cases} \text{In some cases I end up with }\frac{\partial f}{\partial \textbf{u}} = 0\text{ but...
  19. leehuan

    Statistics Marathon & Questions

    Re: Statistics \text{I have a joint distribution}\\ f_{(X_1,X_2)}(x_1,x_2) = \frac{1}{2\sqrt{3}\pi} e^{ -\frac12 \left[ \frac{(x_1-4)^2}{3} +(x_2-2)^2 \right] } \text{ for } x\in \mathbb{R},y \in \mathbb{R} Can I just assume that I have a bivariate Gaussian distribution with X1 and X2 independent?
  20. leehuan

    Statistics Marathon & Questions

    Re: Statistics If I smack an indicator function onto the f(theta;x_1,...,x_n) it would be indicating on [0≤x≤theta] right?
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