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Maths
GCSE

Rationalise the denominator of the following fraction: 1/(√2 + 1)

We start with 1/(√2 + 1) 

Normally with rationalising surd denominators we multiply the top and bottom of the fraction by the denominator. But this time we have a surd ADDED by a rational...

RM
Answered by Richard M. Maths tutor
28431 Views

The Curve C has the equation 2x^2-11+13. The point Q lies on C such that the gradient of the normal to C at Q is -1/9. Find the x-co-ordinate of Q

The first ste here is the find the general equation for the gradient tangential to the curve. This is done by differentiation of the equation to give 4x-11=dy/dx. dy/dx is the gradient...

MH
Answered by Matthew H. Maths tutor
4511 Views

Factorise 15r+10

Step 1) look at the numbers 

Both 15 and 10 are factors of 5

step 2 ) look at the letters 

there is only one letter 'r' after the 15 

step 3) the...

JL
Answered by Judy L. Maths tutor
9423 Views

How do I solve a simple simultaneous equation?

Simultaneous equations pop up all the time in maths, science, and engineering, so being able to solve them is really useful. Although they can look a bit daunting at first, the same general rules apply...

JM
Answered by Joe M. Maths tutor
4387 Views

A sequence increases by 5 each time and the first term is x. The sum of the first four terms is 54. Set up and solve an equation to work out the value of x.

The first term is x, and if it increases by 5 each time then the second term is x+5, third is x+10, and the fourth is x+15.

Adding these values together we get 4x+5+10+15, and this equals...

TP
Answered by Tom P. Maths tutor
9803 Views

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