By using the substitution $t = \tan \frac{\theta}{2}$, we can express the trigonometric identities in terms of $t$ - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 2 - 2007 - Paper 1
Question 2
By using the substitution $t = \tan \frac{\theta}{2}$, we can express the trigonometric identities in terms of $t$.
Starting with the identity for cosine:
$$\cos \t... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:By using the substitution $t = \tan \frac{\theta}{2}$, we can express the trigonometric identities in terms of $t$ - HSC - SSCE Mathematics Extension 1 - Question 2 - 2007 - Paper 1
Step 1
Show that $\frac{1 - \cos \theta}{\sin \theta} = t$
96%
114 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
By using the substitution t=tan2θ, we can express the trigonometric identities in terms of t.
Starting with the identity for cosine:
cosθ=1+t21−t2
We have:
1−cosθ=1−1+t21−t2=1+t22t2
Now for sine:
sinθ=1+t22t
Thus,
sinθ1−cosθ=1+t22t1+t22t2=t
Step 2
Sketch the graph of $y = f(x)$, indicating the endpoints
99%
104 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
To sketch the graph of y=f(x), we note that f(x) is defined for −1≤x≤1. The coordinates are (−1,2π) and (1,0).
Step 3
State the range of $f(x)$
96%
101 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
The range of f(x) is [0,2π].
Step 4
Find the values of a and b
98%
120 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
The polynomial P(x)=x2+ax+b has a zero at x=2 so that P(2)=0.
Also, when P(x) is divided by x+1, the remainder is 18. This gives us a system of equations:
2a+b=−4
−a+b=17
Solving these yields a=−7 and b=10.
Step 5
Find the acceleration ten seconds after she jumps
97%
117 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
To find the acceleration, we differentiate the velocity function:
a=100e−2t
At t=10 seconds:
a(10)=100e−20≈0.0000454 m/s2
Step 6
Find the distance fallen in the first ten seconds
97%
121 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
To find the distance fallen, we integrate the velocity:
s=50(t+0.5e−2t)+C
As she starts from 2000 m:
Integrating from 0 to 10 seconds gives:
s≈2284 m.