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Find dy/dx for y = x^3*e^x*cos(x)

In this problem, we see that y is a product of 3 functions of x. That means that in order to find dy/dx we need to use the product rule. The product rule tells us that in this case we should differentiate...

LN
Answered by Lyudmil N. Maths tutor
9722 Views

Solve x² ≥ | 5x - 6 | (Question from AQA Core 3 June 2016)

To solve this question we can break it down in to a multiple small stages.

The first thing to tackle is the use of modulus around 5x - 6. This effectively means we have two equations to solve:

JH
Answered by James H. Maths tutor
6463 Views

Solve the simultaneous equations (1) x + 3y = 7 and (2) 2x + y = 4

It's impossible to solve an equation with two unknowns (x and y) so we must find a way to get rid of either x or y before solving an equation. Using substitution rearrange the equation 1 so x is the only ...

SS
Answered by Simon S. Maths tutor
4171 Views

64% of an audience are female. Work out the ratio females : males Give your answer in its simplest form.

64% are female. This 64% out of 100%.

36% are male  

So the ratio is 64 : 36 or 32 : 18


Can then be simplified to 16 : 9

JQ
Answered by Jordan Q. Maths tutor
3225 Views

Use chain rule and implicit differentiation to find dy/dx for y^3 = 1 + 3*x^2, then show that they are equal

When using the Chain Rule, it is best to put our equal in a form where there are no operations performed on the subject. i.e. y = (1 + 3*x2)1/3

Then to help make it clear what...

JP
Answered by Joshua P. Maths tutor
8639 Views

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