KingOfActing
lukewarm mess
Re: HSC 2016 3U Marathon
Thought about this question just now. Not sure if it can be done.
Thought about this question just now. Not sure if it can be done.
Basically what I was hoping would work.
Trick question, the integral divergesAnd hence, evaluate
e^x + C
if you can do this you will get a rep from me
Most of us can do this; will we all get a rep from you?
if you can do this you will get a rep from me
if you can do this you will get a rep from me
I'm tired so I'm not too sure but don't you want to subtract X(B) from X(A) instead of adding them? If you want to find when they're the furthest apart then wouldn't you be wanting to maximise the difference between their distances?Two particles A and B are moving along a horizontal line with their distances X(A) and X(B) to the right of the origin O at time t given by
X(A) = 4te^(-t) and X(B) = -4(t^2)(e^-t). The particles are joined by a piece of elastic, whose midpoint M has position X(M) at time t.
When are A and B furthest apart?
Ans: t = 0.5(1+root 5)
ive tried adding X(A) and X(B) and then differentiating it to find the max tp and i dont seem to get the answer. Thx
Maximise the squared difference between the two particles' distance functions.Two particles A and B are moving along a horizontal line with their distances X(A) and X(B) to the right of the origin O at time t given by
X(A) = 4te^(-t) and X(B) = -4(t^2)(e^-t). The particles are joined by a piece of elastic, whose midpoint M has position X(M) at time t.
When are A and B furthest apart?
Ans: t = 0.5(1+root 5)
ive tried adding X(A) and X(B) and then differentiating it to find the max tp and i dont seem to get the answer. Thx
Troll power rule. (It'd be the answer if the integral was de instead of dx, where e is a variable rather than the number e, and x is a parameter independent of this variable e, and assuming x is not equal to -1.)i dont get it lol
OHHHH lolTroll power rule. (It'd be the answer if the integral was de instead of dx, where e is a variable rather than the number e, and x is a parameter independent of this variable e, and assuming x is not equal to -1.)
wait so ive tried what leehuan said and i subtracted it and i end up with t = -0.5(1+ root 5) as the max value instead of t = 0.5(1 + root5) ive doubled checked and i dont see any errors. Thoughts?Maximise the squared difference between the two particles' distance functions.
What was the function you tried to maximise?wait so ive tried what leehuan said and i subtracted it and i end up with t = -0.5(1+ root 5) as the max value instead of t = 0.5(1 + root5) ive doubled checked and i dont see any errors. Thoughts?
4(e^-t) (-t^2 + t +1)What was the function you tried to maximise?
This is not the difference between the two functions you gave.4(e^-t) (-t^2 + t +1)