yes, you have to consider the other interval of sin2(theta) so you end up withSomehow for (b)iii. I managed to get 15 <= x <= ~23, but also x >= ~50 (x = feta). So did two friends.
Anyone get the actual answer?
OMGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG.yes, you have to consider the other interval of sin2(theta) so you end up with
theta>50
and
67< theta < 75
Thats what i got, not sure if its right though...Somehow for (b)iii. I managed to get 15 <= x <= ~23, but also x >= ~50 (x = feta). So did two friends.
Anyone get the actual answer?
The geometry question was really easy, though I'm assuming there was a simpler method for the first part rather than proving all right angles by angle in a semicircle = 90 degrees.
Burned out on the last one though. Was low on time and kind of just fumbling around, so I went back and finished the Newton's Method in the last 2 minutes rather than bothering with it.
You are correct, mostly everyone got up to the 2 sets of values, then the hard part was to add the inequalitiesyes, you have to consider the other interval of sin2(theta) so you end up with
theta>50
and
67< theta < 75
alpha's a constant, so cos(alpha) is also a constant.Nooblet94 are you sure there are 2 cos(alphas)? If you differentiate dr/du via chain rule, the cos(alpha) inside the brackets will differentiate to a -sin(alpha) outside.
I think our dux got 100. but I would imagine heaps of other kids got it too.Anyone think they got full marks overall?
change it to 1/12 hourswhy 180??? shoudnt you change 360km/h to 6km/min??? how could you have one in terms of hour and the other in terms of minutes???
does it mean that there will be 3 possible answers since du/dt can be in terms of hour, minute or second?change it to 1/12 hours