so wait they teach u all the 3u hsc stuff relevant in math 1151, then y do they say its assumd knowldge?Integration (substitution and IBP), inverse trig and some other stuff.
you don't need to know, they teach it as if you haven't learned it before.
Not sure I entirely agree with that. You'll need to use trig functions inAlso there is absolutely no trigonometry or trigonmetric equations , I mean you will need to know a few basic formulas for integration but theres absolutely no solving trig eqns , seems like all the stuff done at high school was a waste lol
no, they will never ask you to solve trig eqns, like wow they do except you to know sin^2 +cos^2 =1 ( and the other two ) and they do mention sum and difference formulas ( though these are never used, well I never came across them in math1141 and 1241 ).Not sure I entirely agree with that. You'll need to use trig functions in
* calculus eg integrate sin(x)^2 cos(x)^6 (and in 2nd order d.e.'s)
* complex numbers eg find sin(x) + sin(2x) + ... + sin(nx)
* vector geometry eg what are the angles in the triangle with vertices at (1,2,3), (2,3,1) and (-1,1,-1)
These use mostly pretty basic trig manipulation, but they won't slow down to explain the 3u stuff.
MATH1151 Q25(a) Find sin^(-1)(sqrt(3)/2)They will never ask you to solve stuff like sin(x) = 1/2 or sqrt(2)cos(x) + sin(x) = 1 , they never ask you about the auxiallry angle method or the t result method, or anything really
MATH1151 Q25(a) Find sin^(-1)(sqrt(3)/2)
or perhaps
Q30(a) Show that 2 tan^(-1) 2 = pi - cos^(-1)(3/5)
(Of course if you want something more challenging you might get to 2nd year where they solve sin(z)=2 )
...what ever it comes under, it is definitely asking you to solve "something like sin(x) = 1/2".For starters that comes under inverse functions, and even so there is little trigonmetry in it.
You are right that they are not trying to redo the stuff that you did at school. They are trying to show you that vector methods are better than doing straight trig for many problems. Most of the things that you list here are not taught in uni maths, but I used all of them at some stage or other in doing 1st year problems. The cosine rule is proved right at the start of the material on dot products, to justify why angles in n-dimensions are defined the way they are.I reckon someone with 2 unit knowledge of trig ( or even no trig knowledge ) could quite easily get 80 in both math1A and B , there is very little trig
no sin , cosine rules, no area of triangle A= (1/2)absin(C) , no bearings, no 3d trig