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Ahhhh, I have a test tomorrow and I'm having a lot of trouble figuring out these questions, can you please help?
(1) Find two numbers whose difference is 10 and whose product is a minimum.
(2) Determine the maximum area of a triangle, in square centimetres, if the sum of its base and height is 10 cm.
(3) Find the value of q so that quadratic equation y=-3(x+2)^2 + q passes through this point.
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Even if you can only help me with one question, I'm in big trouble!!!
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(1) Let the numbers be x and x+10. Then their product is y = x(x+10). Now apply calculus.
(2) If the base is x, the height is 10−x. The area is y = ½x(10−x). Apply calculus again.
(3) What point?
Last edited by JaneFairfax (2007-04-12 16:59:07)
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1) x(x+10) = x²+10x, the derivative is 2x+10, set it to zero (for a minimum or maximum) and you get x = -5. The product is -25, which I would hazard a guess is the minimum.
That is easiest for me, but you could also solve it using Completing the Square:
x²+10x => (x+5)² - 25, and that indicates the point (-5,-25) as a vertex (turning point).
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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