Related pages:
quadratic formula: x = (-b ±√(b²-4ac)) / 2a
PEMDAS/BODMAS - order of operations: Parentheses/Brackets, Exponents/Order, Multiply-Divide, Add-Subtract
2 equations, for 2 unknowns (need n equations to solve for n unknowns)
Example: 5x + 2y = 7, 3x - y = 6 Solve by a) graphing both equations and see where they intersect (can graph multiple equations on desmos) b) substitution (using one equation set one variable in terms of the other, the substitute into the remaining equation): y = 3x-6 from 2nd equation 5x + 2(3x-6) = 7 substitute into first 11x - 12 = 7 solve for x, then can find y c) addition - put all like terms in columns, multiply/divide as needed to get one set of terms to cancel add the terms, solve for the remaining term 5x + 2y = 7 6x - 2y = 12 -------------- 11x = 19, solve for x, then put in to find y
Define x and y in terms of t (time). Arrows on graph represent increasing values of t. Allows you to create functions, using two graphs, from things are not functions for both x and y together (circles, ellipses, x = y², etc)
Eliminating the parameter: substitute for t and define x in terms of y (or vice versa), aka rectangular equation.
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-osalgebratrig/chapter/parametric-equations/
Arithmetic sequence has a constant difference between the terms, such as 1, 3, 5, 7, 9…
Basic form to find term n: a(n) = a(1) + d(n-1), where d = step size (difference between terms), a(1) is the first term
Sum of an arithmetic sequence:
S = n/2(a + L) S = sum, n = # of terms, a = value of first term, L = value of last term If don't know last term, just substitute a(n): S = n/2 (2a + (n − 1) d)
Geometric sequence terms are found by multiplying the previous term by a constant, such as 2, 4, 8, 16 …
a(n) = arⁿ⁻¹
Other sequences exist:
Convergence of a power sequence: http://math.bu.edu/people/prakashb/Teaching/32LS10/Lectures/11-2.pdf
n! = n * (n-1)! 0! = 1 7!/(7-3)! = 7!/4! = 7*6*5 * (4!/4!) = 7*6*5
Definitions:
composition of functions: (f’g)(x) = f(g(x)), order of evaluation is important
Inverse of a function - only possible if no two values of x produce the same result, ie. must be one-to-one (or limit the domain to make it so)
Example: To find f⁻¹(x) for f(x) = 5x + 3 y = 5x + 3 y-3 = 5x x = (y-3)/5 f⁻¹(x) = (x-3)/5 (replace y with x on the last step, since x is input to the function, and y is output)
Graphing an inverse: reflection of the graph about the line y=x
asymptotes y = (quadratic1 of x) / (quadratic2 of x)
look halfway down the page here: https://www.mathsisfun.com/algebra/rational-expression.html
Annual rate, continuous rate of growth:
Y = a*bᵗ a = principle amount, b = annual growth, t = time (years) y = a*eᵏᵗ = a*(eᵏ)ᵗ, and k = continuous rate of growth k = ln(b)
Half life:
Nt = No(1/2)^(t/t.5) Nt = amount at time t, No = initial amount, t.5 = half-life time
This can be rearranged to:
t.5 = t/(log0.5(Nt/No)) = t / (log(Nt/No)/log(1/2))
Also,
Nt = No*e^(-t/tau) tau = mean lifetime tau = 1/lambda, lambda = decay constant t.5 = ln(2)/lambda (ln(2) is close to 7 => rule of 70 for doubling returns??)
abs. value of imaginary number
|a + bi| = √(a^2 + b^2)
rational numbers can be expressed as a fraction of two integers. The decimal expansion either terminates or repeats.
irrational includes square roots, pi, etc