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The General Equation of a Parabola 1997-05-28
Michelle pose la question :
My name is Michelle and I am a 10th grade student in algebra 2 w/ analysis. I am doing a report on parabolas and I need to know what the general equation is. I've looked in books and keep finding different ones! I also need to know how they can be used in nature.

Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it!

- Michelle
Harley Weston lui répond.

The Area of a Trapezoid. 1997-05-07
Mary George pose la question :
I am doing the area of trapezoids and mixed polygons and I was wondering if you can help me figure out this problem.

A line segment drawn parallel to a leg of a right triangle divides the other leg into segments of 3cm and 6 cm and the hypotenuse into segments of 5cm and 10 cm. The two figures formed are a triangle and a trapezoid. Find the area of each.

I would appreciate if you would email me back the solution.
Harley Weston lui répond.

Surface Area 1997-04-30
Amber Nobile pose la question :
The height of a cylinder is twice the diameter. Express the total surface area as a function of the height h.
Harley Weston lui répond.
A proof that e is Irrational. 1997-04-30
Peter Hall and Jenny pose la question :
We have a little mathematical problem... we need some help proving e is an irrational number!

We don't feel very confident in our formulas, so if You have the time to give us a little explanation we would be very grateful!!!
Doug Farenick and Penny Nom lui répond.

Solving a Trig Equation. 1997-04-28
Susan Harvey pose la question :
Hi I am a teacher and have a calculus problem that I have a solution to but it seems so involved that I would be interested to see if their were other solutions.

Solve for x, if x is from -90 to 90 degrees

tan2x = 8cos{squared}x - cotx
Chris Fisher Denis Hanson and Harley Weston lui répond.

Formulae for Surface Area. 1997-04-28
Gary Millward pose la question :
I'm trying to help my son with his Math homework (Grade 10) and he has to find the surface area of a cone and rectangluar pyramid. We have the formulas for the volume of these solids, but can't seem to locate the formulas for surface area.
Walter Whiteley lui répond.
A Monte Carlo Procedure 1997-04-23
Donna Hall pose la question :
A irregularly shaped object of unknown area A is located in the unit square 0<=x<=1. Consider a random point uniformly distributed over the square. Let X = 1 if the point lies inside the object and X = 0 otherwise. Show that E(X) = A. How could A be estimated from a sequence of n independent points uniformly distributed over the square? How would you use the central limit theorem to gauge the probable size of the error of the estimate.
Harley Weston lui répond.
Natural Logarithm Functions 1997-04-23
Rickson pose la question :
The following two questions are some of my son's homework that he is having trouble with......any advice or assistance would be appreciated.

(eX)5=1000.............the X and 5 are exponents

lnx + ln(x+3) = ln10

In each question the problem is to find x.
Harley Weston lui répond.

Square Roots and Functions. 1997-04-23
Ed pose la question :
1. In most texts the solution to a question such as square root x = -6 is

x is undefined.

Yet when teaching to solve
xsquared = 36
x = +6 or -6

There appears to be a contradiction here. My question is when, where and why do we use the principle square root, not both + and -? This often occurs as the extraneous root in the solution of radical equations and in stating the domain and range of functions involving square roots.

2. Are there any simple rules for determining whether equations are functions without graphing them and doing a vertical line test?
Harley Weston lui répond.

The Central Limit Theorem 1997-04-21
Donna Hall pose la question :
A skeptic gives the following argument to show that there must be a flaw in the central limit theorem:
We know that the sum of independent Poisson random variables follows a Poisson distribution with a parameter that is the sum of the parameters of the summands. In particular, if n independent Poisson random variables, each with parameter 1/n, are summed, the sum has a Poisson distribution with parameter 1. The central limit theoren says the sum tends to a normal distribution, but Poisson distribution with parameter 1 is not normal.

What do you think of this argument?
Neal Madras lui répond.

Proofs 1997-04-13
Daniel pose la question :
I'm having trouble understanding proofs. I don't know how to come up the answers on my own. I search through the book looking for the answer. I understand what they are doing, but I don't know how to do it.
Walter Whiteley lui répond.
The Division Bracket. 1997-04-09
Judy Riley pose la question :
A fellow teacher recently asked if I remembered the exact word for a division bracket (not the symbol with dots, the horizontal line in a fraction, or a solidus). I couldn't. Can you help?
Walter Whiteley and Harley Weston lui répond.
A Geometry Problem 1997-04-09
Gina M. Pisco and Rebecca Henry pose la question :
Three segments of 3, 4, and 5 inches long, one from each vertex of an equilateral triangle, meet at an interior point P. How long is the side of the triangle?
Richard McIntosh lui répond.
Equation of a line 1997-04-08
Susan Gregson pose la question :
I am a secondary school teacher. My students and I would like to know why the letters m and b are traditionally used to stand for slope and Y-intercept in the standard form of an equation. Was this an arbitrary choice? Who made it? Are the letters from Greek ot Latin words?
Harley Weston lui répond.
Graphing Inequalities of Conic Sections 1997-03-24
James Sheldon pose la question :
I'm trying to graph Systems of Conic Sections with inequalities, but I'm running into problems on which area to shade:
x^2+y^2 is greater than or equal to 16
xy > 4

So I graph these two equations, and then my teacher said to substitute a point into it but I'm still not sure how to do it...
Penny Nom lui répond.

 
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