• Best of luck to the class of 2025 for their HSC exams. You got this!
    Let us know your thoughts on the HSC exams here

2u Mathematics Marathon v1.0 (1 Viewer)

Jono_2007

Member
Joined
Jan 29, 2005
Messages
139
Location
My fingers are slowly slipping off a cliff!....HEL
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
SoulSearcher said:
A radioactive substance is decaying at a rate proportional to its mass. Its mass initially is measured at 37.4 grams. Twelve hours later the mass is measured at 31.7 grams. Find:

(i) the decay constant
(ii) the half-life of the substance
In(N/N0)=k.t

i)In (31.7/37.4)=12k
-0.165354023=12k
:.k=-0.01377950 hrs^-1

ii)N=N0.e^-k. t
(1/2)N=N0.e^-0.01377950. t
(1/2)=e^-0.01377950. t
In (1/2)=In. (e^-0.01377950)
In (1/2)=-0.01377950. t
:. t=In (1/2)/(-0.01377950)

therefore the halflife is 50.302 hours
 
Last edited:

SoulSearcher

Active Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2005
Messages
6,751
Location
Entangled in the fabric of space-time ...
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Jono_2007 said:
A=a0e^kt

ii) 31.7=e^12k

In 31.7=In e^12k

In31.7=12k

:.k=(In 31.7)/12

decimal apoximation is k=0.288;

1/2A0=A0e^0.288 t

1/2=e^0.288 t

In (1/2)=In [e^0.288 t]

In(1/2)=0.288 t

:.t=In (1/2)/(0.288)

:. the half life is 2.407 days
in the line in bold you forgot 2 things:

1. where is the original amount i.e. 37.4
2. as this is exponential decay, the value of k has to be negative, therefore -12k
 

SoulSearcher

Active Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2005
Messages
6,751
Location
Entangled in the fabric of space-time ...
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Jono_2007 said:
In(N/N0)=k.t

i)In (31.7/37.4)=12k
-0.165354023=12k
:.k=-0.01377950 hrs^-1

ii)N=N0.e^-k. t
(1/2)N=N0.e^-0.01377950. t
(1/2)=e^-0.01377950. t
In (1/2)=In. (e^-0.01377950)
In (1/2)=-0.01377950. t
:. t=In (1/2)/(-0.01377950)

therefore the halflife is 50.302 hours
that is correct

you can post the next question
 

Jono_2007

Member
Joined
Jan 29, 2005
Messages
139
Location
My fingers are slowly slipping off a cliff!....HEL
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Next question:
Two straight roads Ab and AC, are inclined to each other at 54 degrees. Two bike riders begin simultaniosly from A and travel along the roads at 16 and 24 km.h^-1 respectively. How long is it before they are 60 km apart in a direct line? Answer to the nearest minute.

Enjoy!
 
I

icycloud

Guest
Jono_2007 said:
Next question:
Two straight roads Ab and AC, are inclined to each other at 54 degrees. Two bike riders begin simultaniosly from A and travel along the roads at 16 and 24 km.h^-1 respectively. How long is it before they are 60 km apart in a direct line? Answer to the nearest minute.
Observe that distance = speed x time.

Now, let
d(AB) = s(AB) * t(AB) = 16 * t(AB)
d(AC) = s(AC) * t(AC) = 24 * t(AC)

But, t(AB) = t(AC) [they travel for the same period of time], so let T = t(AB) = t(AC)

Thus, we have d(AB) = 16t, d(AC) = 24t
Now, using the cosine rule, we have:

Cos(54°) = [(16t)^2 + (24t)^2 - 60^2] / [2 . 16t . 24t]
768Cos(54°) t^2 = 832t^2 - 3600
t = +/- Sqrt( -3600 / (768Cos(54°) - 832))
= +/- 3.07558...

Time is always positive, thus we take the positive answer.
t = 3.07558...
= 3 hours 4 minutes 32.11 seconds
= 3 hours 5 minutes (nearest minute)
#

Next question:
Find ∫cos(x)ln[sin(x)^e] dx {Using the substitution u = sin(x)}
First by differentiating xln(x)
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,584
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Riv's integration tutorial for beginners:

"Find the primitive", "Find the anti-derivative", and "Integrate" mean the same thing.

To integrate y=axn, add 1 to the index and divide by this new index.

So the primitive of xn = axn+1 / n+1

Try these out. ;)

Find the primitive of:

a) x2

b) 2x

c) x3 / 3

d) 1 [hint: 1= 1.x0]

e) x1/2


How's that? :)
 
Last edited:

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,584
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Jono_2007 said:
So if the primitive of X^n is x^n+1/n+1; then the dirivative of x^n is dy/dx=n.x^n-1 is that right. But what does with respect to x mean, i've seen it alot.
Yep you got it. ;)

"With respect to x" just means to integrate/differentiate something as a function of x, so integrating y=f(x) is integrating y with respect to x.
 

insert-username

Wandering the Lacuna
Joined
Jun 6, 2005
Messages
1,226
Location
NSW
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
icycloud said:
Next question:
Find ∫cos(x)ln[sin(x)^e] dx {Using the substitution u = sin(x)}
First by differentiating xln(x)
Integration through substitution is 3-unit, isn't it?


I_F
 

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,584
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Hmm... in the hsc 2 unit, I think substitution is in it.
 

SoulSearcher

Active Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2005
Messages
6,751
Location
Entangled in the fabric of space-time ...
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
im going to try this but i have no idea if this is right

icycloud said:
Next question:
Find ∫cos(x)ln[sin(x)^e] dx {Using the substitution u = sin(x)}
First by differentiating xln(x)
d/dx {x ln (x)} = ln(x) + 1

therefore

x ln (x) + c = ∫ {ln (x) + 1} dx
x ln (x) + c = ∫ ln (x) dx + ∫ 1 dx
therefore
x ln (x) + c = x + ∫ ln (x) dx
and
x ln (x) - x + c = ∫ ln (x) dx
therefore we can substitute u for x and thus
u ln (u) - u + c = ∫ ln (u) du

now
∫ cos (x) ln[sin(x)^e] dx
= ∫ cos (x) dx * ∫ ln[sin(x)^e] dx
= ∫ cos (x) dx * e ∫ ln (sin x) dx
= ∫ cos (x) dx * e ∫ ln (u) du , where u = sin (x)

now substituting u ln (u) - u for ∫ ln (u) du
∫ cos (x) dx * e ∫ ln (u) du
= ∫ cos (x) dx * e[u ln (u) - u], disregarding the constant
= {sin (x) * e[u ln (u) - u] } + C
= { u * e[u ln (u) - u] } + C, again using the substitution u = sin (x)
= { e[u2 ln (u) - u2] } + C
= { e [sin2 (x) ln (sin x) - sin2 (x)] } + C

i am not sure if this is right, indeed i have no idea what i just did, so if you can check this is right it would be good
 

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,584
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
icycloud said:
Next question:
Find ∫cos(x)ln[sin(x)^e] dx {Using the substitution u = sin(x)}
First by differentiating xln(x)
I think this is right :p :
d/du(ulnu)=lnu+1

Integrating LHS and RHS,

ulnu=(∫lnu du) + u

∫lnu du=ulnu-u (1)

Now let u=sinx

du/dx=cosx

du=cosx dx

.: ∫cos(x)ln[(sinx)e] dx =∫lnue du

=e∫lnu du

=e(ulnu-u)+C, from (1)

=esinx(ln[sinx]-1) + C

Next Question:

This is a fun one that everyone can have a go at :)

If x2+y2=14xy, express in terms of log x and log y:

a) log (x+y)

b) log (x-y)

c) log (x2-y2)
 
Last edited:

KeypadSDM

B4nn3d
Joined
Apr 9, 2003
Messages
2,624
Location
Sydney, Inner West
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
Riviet said:
If x2+y2=14xy, express in terms of log x and log y:

a) log (x+y)

b) log (x-y)

c) log (x2-y2)
x2+y2=14xy
a) Add 2xy to both sides
(x + y)2 = 16xy
2Log[x + y] = Log[24] + Log[x] + Log[y]
Log[x + y] = 1/2(Log[x] + Log[y]) + 2Log[2]

b) Subtract 2xy from both sides:
(x - y)2 = 12xy
2Log[x - y] = 2Log[2] + Log[3] + Log[x] + Log[y]
Log[x - y] = Log[2] + 1/2(Log[x] + Log[y] + Log[3])

c) Log[x2-y2]
= Log[x - y] + Log[x + y]
= Log[2] + 1/2(Log[x] + Log[y] + Log[3]) + 1/2(Log[x] + Log[y]) + 2Log[2]
= Log[x] + Log[y] + 3Log[2] + (1/2)Log[3]
EDIT: I did a stupid error, god I'm dumb.

I have to admit, that was quite "fun". For a maths question.
 

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,584
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Indeed, that's a fun one.

Keypad, would you like to post the next question? :)
 
I

icycloud

Guest
KeypadSDM said:
A simple one, just because I'm nice:

∫tann[x]dn
I=∫tann[x]dn

Let c = tan[x] (constant)

Now I = ∫cn dn
= ∫e^(nln(c)) dn
= 1/ln(c) ∫ln(c) e^(nln(c)) dn
= cn/ln(c) + C
= tann[x] / ln(tan[x]) + C
#

Next question:
A and B are two points 200 metres apart. For what values of L is it possible to find a circular arc AB of length L metres? Justify your answer.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top