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monsoon's avatar

Can some one tell me how to solve any of these precal equations?

Asked by monsoon (2381points) | asked March 30th, 2008 | 6 responses | “Great Question” (0points) | Flag as…

I am trying to pass an online test to get into a college calculus class, and I took precal like three years ago. These are the questions I got wrong and I need to figure out why. I have the answers, but I don’t understand how to reach them mathematically.

Also, I’ve written equations in a sort of long form because I don’t have proper symbols, so exponents are written as x^y, like on a calculator.

Thanks to anyone who’ll help me with this, I really need it.

1. Find the value of the side of a square whose diagonal is known as ‘a’. (Answer: [a times (square root of 2)]/2)

2. evaluate: sin of pi/6 (Answer: 1/2)

3. A population has P(t)=155063e^(0.14t) individuals, how man days (t) are necessary for the population to reach 1,000,000? (Answer: 13.3137)

4. distance of a car is represented by s=t^2+2t Find the average velocity from t=1 to t=5. (Answer: 12ft/sec)

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skwerl88's avatar

1. Find the value of the side of a square whose diagonal is known as ‘a’. (Answer: [a times (square root of 2)]/2)
think about the square as 2 triangles, the diagonal is the hypotenuse. a^2+b^2=c^2, and since a=b, since its a square, 2a^2=c^2. take the square root of both sides, a*sqrt(2), which equals a+b. since they’re equal, you divide it in two, thuse the (a*sqrt(2))/2)

2. evaluate: sin of pi/6 (Answer: 1/2)
unit circle, the x is cos, y is sin

3. A population has P(t)=155063e^(0.14t) individuals, how man days (t) are necessary for the population to reach 1,000,000? (Answer: 13.3137)
its a problem of continuous interest. e= 2.71828182, set the equation equal to 1,000,000, and solve using the natural log.

4. distance of a car is represented by s=t^2+2t Find the average velocity from t=1 to t=5. (Answer: 12ft/sec)
this one i’ll have to get back to you on. what does everything stand for; does s = distance and t = velocity, or does t = time?

monsoon's avatar

awesome, but I’m sorry,

4. s= distance, and t= time

skwerl88's avatar

that makes things easier; try some physics formulas in there. d=vt for instance.

winblowzxp's avatar

4. This one you’ll need a bit of calculus. First take your function t^2+2t, take the first derivative of it: d/dx f(x)=x^n + c = nx^n-1 +c: d/dt = 2t+2. V(t)=s’(t). Evaluate the derivative at t=1 and t=5. Find the average. (V(1) + V(5)) / 2.

winblowzxp's avatar

At t=5 V(t) = 12, so the average velocity can’t be 12. 12 is the max for that interval.

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