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Math/Science Homework Help from Albert Einstein!
if 3 (yx^2) = y then what does dy/dx equal?


ah that one was too easy.


what is the slope of the line tangent to the curve y = arcsin at x = 1/2?
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Zaverus wrote

Is it true that humans evolved from fishes?


Just you.
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silverteeth wrote

Just some basic algebra 2

Solve:

Root 3 Root x+1 = Root 3x-5

(The root x+1 is under the root that contains the 3)


Hm, I'm not quite sure if I'm reading this correctly, but I'll do what I see.

sqrt(3(x+1)) = sqrt(3x-5)

3x+3 = 3x-5.

No solution.
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Limeintine wrote

How do you find a parallel slope to another by only using the original slope and the x-intercept and so the line would pass through a specific point?


I think what you're after is point-slope form.

Given any slope m and a point (x1,y1), you can define a unique line through that point.

Explicitly, m(x-x1) = y-y1, and this comes directly from choosing an arbitrary point (x,y) and substituting it into the slope formula:

m = (y-y1)/(x-x1).
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iHackLiTE wrote

if 3 (yx^2) = y then what does dy/dx equal?


ah that one was too easy.


what is the slope of the line tangent to the curve y = arcsin at x = 1/2?


1.) Use implicit differentiation.

(d/dx) (3yx^2) = (d/dx)y.

3(dy/dx)x^2 + 6yx = (dy/dx).

6yx = (dy/dx)(1-3x^2).

(dy/dx) = (6yx)/(1-3x^2).

One could also put this in terms of solely x by solving for y in 3yx^2 = y —> y = (3x^2-1)^(-1), giving

(dy/dx) = (-6x)/(1-3x^2)^2.

Or you could have just solved for y from the start and differentiated explicitly in terms of x.

2.) If I recall correctly, (d/dx)(arcsinx) = (1-x^2)^(-1/2).

If that's the case, then the slope of the tangent line at x = 1/2 is simply the derivative evaluated at x = 1/2.

Then, m = (3/4)^(-1/2) = (4/3)^(1/2) = 2/sqrt(3) (= (2*sqrt(3))/3, for you "rationalize the denominator" folk).

Edit: After a little thinking, I remembered the way to derive the inverse trig derviatives.

Let's do y = arccos(x). Then, cos(y) = x. Implicitly differentiate with respect to x to obtain -sin(y) (dy/dx) = 1.

Thus, dy/dx = -csc(y). Use right triangle trignometry to find csc(y) given than cos(y) = x/1 = adjacent/hypotenuse. Thus, csc(y) = (1-x^2)^(-1/2).

Hence, dy/dx = -(1-x^2)^(-1/2).
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x^3 + y^3 + z^3 = 29

x^3 + y^3 + z^3 = 30
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ThatOneCombo wrote

x^3 + y^3 + z^3 = 29

x^3 + y^3 + z^3 = 30


I'm not seeing that there could be any solution to this system.

If (x1,y1,z1) were a solution to the first equation, then how could it also possibly be the same as that number plus one?

We'd be looking for numbers that satisfy a = a+1, and those simply don't exist.
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AlbertEinstein wrote

ThatOneCombo wrote...



I'm not seeing that there could be any solution to this system.

If (x1,y1,z1) were a solution to the first equation, then how could it also possibly be the same as that number plus one?

We'd be looking for numbers that satisfy a = a+1, and those simply don't exist.

That was a challenge math thing that was posted in the hallways, you can use only use integers and the two equations can have different values for the variables.
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ThatOneCombo wrote

AlbertEinstein wrote...


That was a challenge math thing that was posted in the hallways, you can use only use integers and the two equations can have different values for the variables.


First one's straightforward: 1^3+1^3+3^3 = 1+1+27 = 29.

Second one, haha: https://ckrao.wordpress.com/2012/04/10/integers-equal-to-the-sum-of-three-cubes/.

Code a program to go through millions and millions of numbers to get that one, or just look at the link.
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What is the smallest thing? I can think of a quark
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I have a headache
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AlbertEinstein wrote

silverteeth wrote...



Hm, I'm not quite sure if I'm reading this correctly, but I'll do what I see.

sqrt(3(x+1)) = sqrt(3x-5)

3x+3 = 3x-5.

No solution.


13 + root 105 all over 6
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Jinxful wrote

What is the smallest thing? I can think of a quark
electrons of an atom
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silverteeth wrote

AlbertEinstein wrote...



13 + root 105 all over 6


1.) Stop using "root" to talk about square roots. There are "cube roots" and "sixteenth roots" as well.

2.) Use parentheses, because only you know what you meant by your equation.
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Jinxful wrote

What is the smallest thing? I can think of a quark


The "Planck length" and strings are the things that come to mind.
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Would you be interested in answer philosophy questions?
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@AlbertEinstein Dude. I love you
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