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3. (a) At the front of a building there are five garage doors - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 3 - 2010 - Paper 1

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3. (a) At the front of a building there are five garage doors. Two of the doors are to be painted red, one is to be painted green, one blue and one orange. (i) How ... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:3. (a) At the front of a building there are five garage doors - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 3 - 2010 - Paper 1

Step 1

Part (a)(i) How many possible arrangements are there for the colours on the doors?

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Answer

To find the total number of arrangements for the colours on the doors, we can use the formula for permutations since the doors have different colours apart from the two red doors.

The total arrangements can be calculated as:

rac{5!}{2!} = \frac{120}{2} = 60

Thus, there are 60 different arrangements for the colours on the doors.

Step 2

Part (a)(ii) How many possible arrangements are there for the colours on the doors if the two red doors are next to each other?

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If we consider the two red doors as a single unit, we can treat them as one 'block'. Therefore, we have four units to arrange: the 'red block', green, blue, and orange.

The arrangements are:

4!=244! = 24

Within the 'red block', the two red doors can be arranged among themselves in:

2!=22! = 2

Therefore, the total arrangements are:

4!×2!=24×2=484! \times 2! = 24 \times 2 = 48

So, there are 48 arrangements where the two red doors are next to each other.

Step 3

Part (b)(i) The graph has two points of inflexion. Find the x coordinates of these points.

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To find the points of inflexion, we need to determine where the second derivative of the function changes sign. We begin by finding the first derivative:

f(x)=2xex2f'(x) = 2xe^{x^2}

Now, finding the second derivative using the product rule:

f(x)=2ex2+2x(2xex2)=2ex2(1+2x2)f''(x) = 2e^{x^2} + 2x(2xe^{x^2}) = 2e^{x^2}(1 + 2x^2)

Setting the second derivative equal to zero:

2ex2(1+2x2)=02e^{x^2}(1 + 2x^2) = 0

Since ex2>0e^{x^2} > 0, we can solve:

ightarrow x^2 = -\frac{1}{2},$$ which has no real solution. Therefore, we need to check intervals to find where the sign of $f''(x)$ changes. The inflection points occur at: $$x = -1, x = 1$$.

Step 4

Part (b)(ii) Explain why the domain of f(x) must be restricted if f(x) is to have an inverse function.

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For a function to possess an inverse, it must be one-to-one (bijective). The function f(x)=ex2f(x) = e^{x^2} is not one-to-one for its entire domain since it is symmetric about the y-axis. This means that for any positive yy, there are two corresponding xx values: one positive and one negative. Therefore, we restrict the domain, typically to x0x \geq 0, to ensure each output corresponds to a unique input.

Step 5

Part (b)(iii) Find a formula for f^{-1}(x) if the domain of f(x) is restricted to x \geq 0.

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Given that the original function is y=ex2y = e^{x^2}, we can express it as:

ightarrow y^2 = \ln(x)\ ightarrow y = \sqrt{\ln(x)}\ ext{ for } x \geq 1$$. Thus, the inverse function is: $$f^{-1}(x) = \sqrt{\ln(x)}.$$

Step 6

Part (b)(iv) State the domain of f^{-1}(x).

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The domain of f1(x)f^{-1}(x) corresponds to the range of f(x)f(x) restricted to x0x \geq 0. Since f(x)f(x) can take values from 1 to infinity when x0x \geq 0, the domain of the inverse function is:

Domain of f1(x):[1,)\text{Domain of } f^{-1}(x): [1, \infty).

Step 7

Part (b)(v) Sketch the curve y = f^{-1}(x).

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To sketch the curve y=f1(x)y = f^{-1}(x), we recognize that it represents the function y=ln(x)y = \sqrt{\ln(x)}. The curve starts from the point (1,0) when x=1x=1 and increases gradually as xx increases, with the value of yy increasing without bound as xx approaches infinity. The graph will be located in the first quadrant, curving upwards.

Step 8

Part (b)(vi) Show that there is a solution to the equation x = e^{-x^2} between x = 0.6 and x = 0.7.

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To prove there is a solution, we evaluate the function g(x)=xex2g(x) = x - e^{-x^2}. We compute:

g(0.6) = 0.6 - e^{-0.36} \approx 0.6 - 0.6977 \approx -0.0977\ g(0.7)=0.7e0.490.70.61220.0878g(0.7) = 0.7 - e^{-0.49} \approx 0.7 - 0.6122 \approx 0.0878.

Since g(0.6)<0g(0.6) < 0 and g(0.7)>0g(0.7) > 0, by the Intermediate Value Theorem, there exists at least one solution in the interval [0.6, 0.7].

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