Back to Math AI topics
All TopicsMath AI HL944 flashcards

IB Math AI HL — All Flashcards

Filter by unit or topic, or study everything at once.

Filter by Unit or Topic

All Topics

944 flashcards
Card 1 of 9441.1.1
1.1.1
Question

What is the coefficient in standard form?

Click to reveal answer

Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.

All cards in this selection

Card 11.1.1definition
Question

What is the coefficient in standard form?

Answer

It is the front number in a × 10ⁿ. In valid standard form, it must be at least 1 but smaller than 10.

💡 Hint

Front number only.

Card 21.1.1formula
Question

What two rules must a × 10ⁿ satisfy to be valid standard form?

Answer

1. The coefficient must be at least 1 but smaller than 10. 2. The exponent must be an integer.

💡 Hint

Coefficient range + integer exponent.

Card 31.1.1concept
Question

How do you convert a large ordinary number to standard form?

Answer

Move the decimal so only the first non-zero digit stays before it. Count how many places it moved left. That count becomes the positive exponent.

💡 Hint

Move · count · positive.

Card 41.1.1concept
Question

Write 5 840 000 in standard form.

Answer

5.84 × 10⁶. The decimal moves 6 places left, so the exponent is +6.

💡 Hint

Large number means positive exponent.

Card 51.1.1concept
Question

How do you convert a small decimal to standard form?

Answer

Move the decimal so only the first non-zero digit stays before it. Count how many places it moved right. That count becomes the negative exponent.

💡 Hint

Move · count · negative.

Card 61.1.1concept
Question

Write 0.00052 in standard form.

Answer

5.2 × 10⁻⁴. The decimal moves 4 places right to make 5.2, so the exponent is −4.

💡 Hint

Small decimal means negative exponent.

Card 71.1.1concept
Question

What should you check before finalising any standard form answer?

Answer

Check that the coefficient is at least 1 but smaller than 10, the exponent sign matches the size of the number, and the question asks for standard form rather than ordinary form.

💡 Hint

Coefficient · sign · instruction.

Card 81.1.1concept
Question

Write 73 900 000 in standard form.

Answer

7.39 × 10⁷. Move the decimal 7 places left to get a coefficient between 1 and 10.

💡 Hint

Large number -> move left -> positive exponent.

Card 91.1.1concept
Question

Write 12 050 000 000 in standard form.

Answer

1.205 × 10¹⁰. Move the decimal 10 places left and keep all significant digits in the coefficient.

💡 Hint

Count decimal moves carefully.

Card 101.1.1concept
Question

Write 0.000084 in standard form.

Answer

8.4 × 10⁻⁵. Move the decimal 5 places right to make 8.4, so the exponent is −5.

💡 Hint

Small decimal -> negative exponent.

Card 111.1.1concept
Question

Write 0.000000302 in standard form.

Answer

3.02 × 10⁻⁷. Move the decimal 7 places right so the coefficient is between 1 and 10.

💡 Hint

Move right for tiny numbers.

Card 121.1.1concept
Question

Write 0.0096 in standard form.

Answer

9.6 × 10⁻³. Move the decimal 3 places right to get 9.6, so the exponent is −3.

💡 Hint

Keep coefficient between 1 and 10.

Card 131.1.2concept
Question

7.2 × 10⁻³ in ordinary form?

Answer

0.0072. Move the decimal 3 places left.

💡 Hint

Negative exponent -> left.

Card 141.1.2concept
Question

3.06 × 10⁴ in ordinary form?

Answer

30 600. Move the decimal 4 places right.

💡 Hint

Positive exponent -> right.

Card 151.1.2concept
Question

Bigger or smaller than 1?

Answer

Positive exponent -> bigger than 1. Negative exponent -> smaller than 1.

💡 Hint

Use the sign.

Card 161.1.2definition
Question

Why is 0.48 × 10⁷ invalid?

Answer

Because 0.48 is less than 1, so the coefficient is not valid.

💡 Hint

Coefficient too small.

Card 171.1.2concept
Question

0.48 × 10⁷ in valid form?

Answer

4.8 × 10⁶

💡 Hint

Move right, exponent down 1.

Card 181.1.2definition
Question

Why is 31.5 × 10⁴ not valid standard form?

Answer

Because 31.5 is greater than 10. Rewrite it as 3.15 × 10⁵.

💡 Hint

Coefficient too big.

Card 191.1.2concept
Question

Fast final check?

Answer

Check coefficient, exponent sign, and the form asked for.

💡 Hint

Coefficient, sign, form.

Card 201.1.2definition
Question

Why is 0.6 × 10⁸ not valid standard form?

Answer

Because 0.6 is smaller than 1. Rewrite it as 6.0 × 10⁷.

💡 Hint

Coefficient too small.

Card 211.1.2concept
Question

4.7 × 10⁶ in ordinary form?

Answer

4 700 000. Move the decimal 6 places right.

💡 Hint

Positive exponent -> right.

Card 221.1.2concept
Question

Positive exponent tells you what?

Answer

It will be a large number greater than 1.

💡 Hint

Positive -> bigger number.

Card 231.1.2concept
Question

24.6 × 10⁴ in valid form?

Answer

2.46 × 10⁵

💡 Hint

Coefficient too big -> move left.

Card 241.1.3formula
Question

Multiply in standard form?

Answer

Multiply coefficients. Add exponents.

💡 Hint

x coefficients, + exponents.

Card 251.1.3concept
Question

Final check after a calculation?

Answer

Check the coefficient is between 1 and 10.

💡 Hint

Re-normalise if needed.

Card 261.1.3concept
Question

0.6 × 10⁸: correct it.

Answer

Coefficient too small. Correct form: 6.0 × 10⁷.

💡 Hint

Move right, exponent down 1.

Card 271.1.3concept
Question

15 600 000 in standard form?

Answer

1.56 × 10⁷

💡 Hint

Calculator output is not the final form.

Card 281.1.3formula
Question

What is the rule for dividing two numbers in standard form?

Answer

(a × 10ᵐ) ÷ (b × 10ⁿ) = (a ÷ b) × 10^(m-n). Divide the coefficients and subtract the exponents, then re-normalise if needed.

💡 Hint

Coefficients ÷, exponents subtract.

Card 291.1.3concept
Question

What must be true before you add or subtract numbers in standard form?

Answer

The powers of 10 must match first. Rewrite one number so both terms use the same power of 10, then add or subtract the coefficients.

💡 Hint

Same power first.

Card 301.1.3concept
Question

Rewrite 3.0 x 10^4 so it can be subtracted from 1.8 x 10^5 easily.

Answer

3.0 x 10^4 = 0.3 x 10^5. Then 1.8 x 10^5 - 0.3 x 10^5 = 1.5 x 10^5.

💡 Hint

Match the power of 10 first.

Card 311.1.3concept
Question

Rewrite 3 x 10^4 so it can be subtracted from 18 x 10^4 easily.

Answer

Use matching powers first. Keep both terms as x 10^4, then subtract the coefficients.

💡 Hint

Match the power of 10 first.

Card 321.1.3concept
Question

Rewrite 3.0 × 10⁴ so it can be subtracted from 1.8 × 10⁵ easily.

Answer

3.0 × 10⁴ = 0.3 × 10⁵. Then 1.8 × 10⁵ - 0.3 × 10⁵ = 1.5 × 10⁵.

💡 Hint

Match the power of 10 first.

Card 331.1.3definition
Question

Why is 0.5 × 10² not a finished final answer in standard form?

Answer

Because the coefficient 0.5 is less than 1. Re-normalise it to 5.0 × 10¹.

💡 Hint

Coefficient must be between 1 and 10.

Card 341.1.3definition
Question

Why is 1/2 x 10^2 not a finished final answer in standard form?

Answer

Because the coefficient is less than 1. Re-normalise it to 5 x 10^1.

💡 Hint

Coefficient must be between 1 and 10.

Card 351.1.3definition
Question

Why is 0.5 x 10^2 not a finished final answer in standard form?

Answer

Because the coefficient 0.5 is less than 1. Re-normalise it to 5.0 x 10^1.

💡 Hint

Coefficient must be between 1 and 10.

Card 361.1.3concept
Question

A question says “calculate” and your calculator gives 24.6 × 10⁴. What should your final line be?

Answer

2.46 × 10⁵, because the coefficient must be between 1 and 10 in valid standard form.

💡 Hint

Do not copy unfinished calculator form.

Card 371.1.3concept
Question

A question says "calculate" and your calculator gives a coefficient above 10. What should your final line do?

Answer

Rewrite to valid standard form by making the coefficient between 1 and 10, and adjust the exponent to keep the same value.

💡 Hint

Do not copy unfinished calculator form.

Card 381.1.3concept
Question

A question says "calculate" and your calculator gives 24.6 x 10^4. What should your final line be?

Answer

2.46 x 10^5, because the coefficient must be between 1 and 10 in valid standard form.

💡 Hint

Do not copy unfinished calculator form.

Card 391.1.3formula
Question

Multiply in standard form?

Answer

Multiply coefficients. Add exponents.

💡 Hint

x coefficients, + exponents.

Card 401.1.3formula
Question

Divide in standard form?

Answer

Divide coefficients. Subtract exponents.

💡 Hint

/ coefficients, - exponents.

Card 411.1.3concept
Question

Add or subtract in standard form?

Answer

Match the powers first.

💡 Hint

Match powers first.

Card 421.1.3concept
Question

0.5 × 10² in valid form?

Answer

5 × 10¹

💡 Hint

Coefficient must be between 1 and 10.

Card 431.1.3concept
Question

0.48 × 10⁷: final answer?

Answer

4.8 × 10⁶

💡 Hint

Move right, exponent down 1.

Card 441.1.3concept
Question

3 quick checks?

Answer

Coefficient, sign, requested form.

💡 Hint

Quick final scan.

Card 451.1.4concept
Question

Your GDC shows 5.08E-4. Write as standard form and as an ordinary number.

Answer

5.08 × 10⁻⁴ = 0.000508

💡 Hint

Negative exponent → small number. Move decimal 4 places left.

Card 461.1.4definition
Question

What does 'E' mean on a GDC display?

Answer

E means × 10^(the number after E). So 3.7E9 means 3.7 × 10⁹, and 5.1E-4 means 5.1 × 10⁻⁴.

💡 Hint

E replaces "× 10^..."

Card 471.1.4concept
Question

Your GDC shows 3.7E9. Write this in standard form.

Answer

3.7 × 10⁹

💡 Hint

Before E = coefficient, after E = exponent.

Card 481.1.4concept
Question

Your GDC shows 6.4E-3. Write as (a) standard form and (b) ordinary number.

Answer

(a) 6.4 × 10⁻³ (b) 0.0064

💡 Hint

Negative exponent → decimal moves left.

Card 491.1.4definition
Question

Your GDC shows 1.25E11 after a calculation. Can you write 1.25E11 as your final answer?

Answer

No. Writing E notation earns zero marks. You must write 1.25 × 10¹¹.

💡 Hint

GDC notation ≠ standard form.

Card 501.1.4concept
Question

What is the two-step habit for reading GDC output?

Answer

Step 1: Read the number before E → that is your coefficient a. Step 2: Read the number after E → that is your exponent n. Then write a × 10ⁿ.

💡 Hint

Before E = a, after E = n.

Card 511.10.1formula
Question

What does a negative exponent mean? (x⁻ⁿ)

Answer

A reciprocal: x⁻ⁿ = 1/xⁿ. It does NOT make the value negative.

Card 521.10.1formula
Question

What is x⁰ (for x ≠ 0)?

Answer

1 — anything (non-zero) to the power 0 is 1.

Card 531.10.1formula
Question

What does x^(1/n) mean?

Answer

The n-th root of x: x^(1/n) = ⁿ√x. So x^(1/2) = √x, x^(1/3) = ³√x.

Card 541.10.1formula
Question

What does x^(m/n) mean?

Answer

ⁿ√(xᵐ) = (ⁿ√x)ᵐ — the bottom n is the root, the top m is the power.

Card 551.10.1concept
Question

Evaluate 27^(2/3).

Answer

Cube root of 27 is 3, then square: 3² = 9.

Card 561.10.1formula
Question

Write √x as a power of x.

Answer

x^(1/2). (And ³√x = x^(1/3), 1/√x = x^(−1/2).)

Card 571.10.1concept
Question

Evaluate 16^(−3/4).

Answer

Reciprocal of 16^(3/4): 4th root of 16 is 2, cube it (8), reciprocal = 1/8.

Card 581.10.1concept
Question

Simplify √x ÷ x² as a single power.

Answer

x^(1/2) / x² = x^(1/2 − 2) = x^(−3/2).

Card 591.11.1formula
Question

What is the sum to infinity of a geometric series?

Answer

S∞ = u₁/(1 − r), the finite total of all (infinitely many) terms — valid only when |r| < 1.

Card 601.11.1concept
Question

When does a geometric series have a sum to infinity?

Answer

Only when −1 < r < 1 (|r| < 1). The terms must shrink toward 0. If |r| ≥ 1, no sum to infinity exists.

Card 611.11.1concept
Question

Why does an infinite series sometimes give a finite total?

Answer

When |r| < 1 each term is a fraction of the last, so the terms shrink toward 0 fast enough that the running total closes in on a fixed value.

Card 621.11.1concept
Question

Sum to infinity with u₁ = 12, r = 0.5?

Answer

S∞ = 12/(1 − 0.5) = 12/0.5 = 24.

Card 631.11.1formula
Question

How do you find r from S∞ and u₁?

Answer

Rearrange S∞ = u₁/(1 − r): 1 − r = u₁/S∞, so r = 1 − u₁/S∞.

Card 641.11.1concept
Question

S∞ = 36 and u₁ = 24. Find r.

Answer

1 − r = 24/36 = 2/3, so r = 1/3 (and |1/3| < 1, so it converges).

Card 651.11.1concept
Question

In a bouncing-ball distance problem, what's the trick?

Answer

Add the first drop, then count each rebound height TWICE (up and down): total = drop + 2 × (rebound series).

Card 661.11.1concept
Question

After finding S∞ in an applied question, what earns the last mark?

Answer

Interpreting it in context (e.g. the steady drug level or long-run total) and commenting on whether the model is realistic.

Card 671.12.1concept
Question

What is i, and what is i²?

Answer

i is the imaginary unit, defined by i² = −1 (so i = √−1).

Card 681.12.1formula
Question

What is the Cartesian form of a complex number?

Answer

z = a + bi, where a is the real part and b is the imaginary part (both real numbers).

Card 691.12.1concept
Question

How do you add or subtract complex numbers?

Answer

Combine the real parts together and the imaginary parts together (treat i like a letter).

Card 701.12.1concept
Question

How do you multiply complex numbers?

Answer

Expand the brackets, then replace every i² with −1 and collect like terms.

Card 711.12.1concept
Question

What is the conjugate of z = a + bi, and why is it useful?

Answer

z* = a − bi (flip the sign of the imaginary part). z·z* = a² + b² is real, which lets you divide.

Card 721.12.1concept
Question

How do you divide complex numbers?

Answer

Multiply top and bottom by the conjugate of the denominator, making the bottom real, then split into a + bi.

Card 731.12.1concept
Question

What does an Argand diagram show, and where is z = a + bi plotted?

Answer

It plots complex numbers; z = a + bi is the point (a, b) — real across, imaginary up.

Card 741.12.1formula
Question

What is the modulus |z| of z = a + bi?

Answer

|z| = √(a² + b²), the distance from the origin to (a, b) on the Argand diagram.

Card 751.13.1formula
Question

What is the modulus r of z = a + bi?

Answer

r = |z| = √(a² + b²) — its distance from the origin on the Argand diagram.

Card 761.13.1concept
Question

What is the argument of z?

Answer

The angle θ from the positive real axis (anticlockwise positive); fix the quadrant by sketching the point.

Card 771.13.1formula
Question

Write the three equivalent polar/exponential forms of z.

Answer

z = r(cos θ + i sin θ) = r cis θ = r e^(iθ).

Card 781.13.1formula
Question

How do you multiply two complex numbers in polar form?

Answer

Multiply the moduli and add the arguments: z₁z₂ = r₁r₂ e^(i(θ₁+θ₂)).

Card 791.13.1formula
Question

How do you divide two complex numbers in polar form?

Answer

Divide the moduli and subtract the arguments: z₁/z₂ = (r₁/r₂) e^(i(θ₁−θ₂)).

Card 801.13.1concept
Question

Convert z = 1 + √3 i to exponential form.

Answer

r = √(1+3) = 2, θ = arctan(√3) = π/3, so z = 2 e^(iπ/3).

Card 811.13.1concept
Question

Convert 4 e^(iπ/6) to a + bi.

Answer

4(cos π/6 + i sin π/6) = 4(√3/2 + i/2) = 2√3 + 2i.

Card 821.13.1concept
Question

Geometrically, what does multiplying by r e^(iθ) do to the Argand diagram?

Answer

It scales (stretches) by r and rotates by angle θ — that's why complex numbers model rotations and phase shifts.

Card 831.13.2formula
Question

State De Moivre's theorem.

Answer

(r cis θ)ⁿ = rⁿ cis(nθ) = rⁿ e^(inθ): power the modulus, multiply the argument by n.

Card 841.13.2concept
Question

Evaluate (1 + i)⁸ using De Moivre.

Answer

r = √2, θ = π/4; (√2)⁸ cis(8·π/4) = 16 cis(2π) = 16.

Card 851.13.2concept
Question

When is zⁿ a (positive) real number?

Answer

Real when nθ is a multiple of π; positive real when nθ is a multiple of 2π.

Card 861.13.2concept
Question

What is the impedance of an AC circuit in complex form?

Answer

Z = R + iX, where R is resistance and X is reactance; |Z| is the total opposition and arg Z is the phase angle.

Card 871.13.2concept
Question

How do impedances combine in series?

Answer

They add as complex numbers: Z_total = Z₁ + Z₂ + …

Card 881.13.2concept
Question

How do you add two sinusoids of the same frequency?

Answer

Represent each as a phasor A e^(iφ), add the phasors, then read off the resultant amplitude (modulus) and phase (argument).

Card 891.13.2concept
Question

Find |Z| for Z = 3 + 4i Ω.

Answer

|Z| = √(3² + 4²) = √25 = 5 Ω.

Card 901.13.2concept
Question

Find z⁵ for z = 1 − √3 i.

Answer

r = 2, θ = −π/3; z⁵ = 32 cis(−5π/3) = 32 cis(π/3) = 16 + 16√3 i.

Card 911.14.1concept
Question

How do you state the order of a matrix?

Answer

Rows × columns, rows first. E.g. 2 rows and 3 columns is a 2 × 3 matrix.

Card 921.14.1concept
Question

When can two matrices be added?

Answer

Only when they have the same order; then you add matching entries.

Card 931.14.1concept
Question

How do you scalar-multiply a matrix?

Answer

Multiply every entry by the scalar (e.g. 2A doubles each entry).

Card 941.14.1concept
Question

When is the product AB defined, and what is its order?

Answer

When A's columns = B's rows (inner numbers match). The result is (rows of A) × (columns of B) — the outer numbers.

Card 951.14.1concept
Question

How do you compute an entry of AB?

Answer

Slide along a row of A and down a column of B, multiply pair-by-pair, and add.

Card 961.14.1formula
Question

What is the 2×2 identity matrix and what does it do?

Answer

I = ((1, 0), (0, 1)); AI = IA = A, so it leaves a matrix unchanged (like ×1).

Card 971.14.1formula
Question

What is the determinant of A = ((a, b), (c, d))?

Answer

det A = ad − bc. If it equals 0, A has no inverse (singular).

Card 981.14.1formula
Question

What is the inverse of A = ((a, b), (c, d))?

Answer

A⁻¹ = 1/(ad − bc) · ((d, −b), (−c, a)): swap diagonal, negate off-diagonal, divide by det.

Card 991.15.1concept
Question

What is an eigenvector of a matrix A?

Answer

A non-zero direction v that A only stretches: Av = λv (same direction, scaled by the eigenvalue λ).

Card 1001.15.1formula
Question

How do you find the eigenvalues of A?

Answer

Solve the characteristic equation det(A − λI) = 0 for λ (subtract λ down the diagonal, set the determinant to zero).

Card 1011.15.1concept
Question

How do you find an eigenvector for a given eigenvalue λ?

Answer

Solve (A − λI)v = 0; the rows give one line, so pick the simplest non-zero whole-number vector on it.

Card 1021.15.1formula
Question

In A = PDP⁻¹, what are P and D?

Answer

P has the eigenvectors as its columns; D has the matching eigenvalues on its diagonal (same order).

Card 1031.15.1formula
Question

How do you compute a power Aⁿ once A is diagonalised?

Answer

Aⁿ = PDⁿP⁻¹, and Dⁿ just raises each diagonal eigenvalue to the power n.

Card 1041.15.1concept
Question

For a transition matrix, what does the eigenvalue λ = 1 give you?

Answer

Its eigenvector is the steady state — the long-run mix the matrix leaves unchanged (rescale so the entries sum to the total).

Card 1051.15.1concept
Question

What happens to the part of a state along an eigenvector with |λ| < 1 as time goes on?

Answer

It is multiplied by λⁿ → 0, so that part fades away, leaving only the λ = 1 piece.

Card 1061.15.1concept
Question

Eigenvalues of a triangular (or diagonal) matrix?

Answer

They are exactly the entries on its main diagonal.

Card 1071.2.1definition
Question

Arithmetic sequence?

Answer

A sequence with the same difference each time.

💡 Hint

Same difference.

Card 1081.2.1concept
Question

Common difference?

Answer

Subtract one term from the next term.

💡 Hint

Next minus previous.

Card 1091.2.1formula
Question

nth term formula?

Answer

uₙ = u₁ + (n − 1)d

💡 Hint

u₁, d, n.

Card 1101.2.1concept
Question

8th term of 2, 6, 10, 14, ...?

Answer

30

💡 Hint

d = 4.

Card 1111.2.2definition
Question

Sequence or series?

Answer

Sequence = list. Series = sum.

💡 Hint

Commas vs plus signs.

Card 1121.2.2formula
Question

Sum formula?

Answer

Sₙ = (n/2) × (2u₁ + (n − 1)d)

💡 Hint

For totals.

Card 1131.2.2concept
Question

Σ from n = 1 to 4 of 2n?

Answer

2 + 4 + 6 + 8 = 20

💡 Hint

Substitute values of n.

Card 1141.2.3definition
Question

What does sigma mean?

Answer

It is a short way to write a sum.

💡 Hint

Add the terms.

Card 1151.2.4concept
Question

Simple interest pattern?

Answer

Simple interest adds the same amount each time.

💡 Hint

Equal increase.

Card 1161.2.4concept
Question

IB gives you two middle terms. How do you find d?

Answer

Write uₙ = u₁ + (n−1)d for each term. Subtract one equation from the other — u₁ cancels, leaving d.

💡 Hint

Label the equations (1) and (2) before subtracting.

Card 1171.2.4concept
Question

One value or total?

Answer

One value -> nth term. Total -> sum formula.

💡 Hint

Choose the right formula.

Card 1181.2.4concept
Question

Why do we subtract the two equations?

Answer

Both equations contain u₁. Subtracting cancels u₁ so only d remains.

💡 Hint

Think: what do both equations have in common?

Card 1191.2.4concept
Question

Approximate arithmetic model?

Answer

Real data can be close to arithmetic without being exact.

💡 Hint

Close pattern.

Card 1201.2.4concept
Question

If values rise by 60 each step, arithmetic?

Answer

Yes, because the common difference is 60.

💡 Hint

Same increase.

Card 1211.2.4concept
Question

You solve uₙ > threshold and get n > 11.6. What is n?

Answer

n = 12. Always round up — you need the first whole term that passes the threshold.

💡 Hint

n must be a whole number. Never round down for threshold questions.

Card 1221.2.4example
Question

Year 3 salary = $31 200. Year 8 salary = $43 200. What is d?

Answer

d = $2 400. Eq(1): u₁ + 7d = 43 200. Eq(2): u₁ + 2d = 31 200. Subtract: 5d = 12 000.

💡 Hint

Subtract the lower-n equation from the higher-n equation.

Card 1231.3.4concept
Question

What condition must hold for S∞ to exist?

Answer

|r| < 1 — the terms must be getting smaller toward zero.

💡 Hint

Think: what happens to terms if r = 2 vs r = 0.5?

Card 1241.3.4formula
Question

Write the Sum to Infinity formula.

Answer

S∞ = u₁ ÷ (1 − r). Only valid when |r| < 1.

💡 Hint

The denominator is (1 − r), not r.

Card 1251.3.4example
Question

Does S∞ exist for: 3 + 6 + 12 + 24 + ... ?

Answer

No. r = 6 ÷ 3 = 2. |r| = 2 ≥ 1, so S∞ does not exist.

💡 Hint

Find r first, then check |r|.

Card 1261.3.4example
Question

Does S∞ exist for: 10 + 5 + 2.5 + ... ? If yes, find it.

Answer

r = 0.5. |r| = 0.5 < 1 ✓. S∞ = 10 ÷ (1 − 0.5) = 20.

💡 Hint

Check |r| < 1 first, then apply the formula.

Card 1271.3.4process
Question

S∞ = 30 and r = 0.4. Find u₁.

Answer

u₁ = S∞ × (1 − r) = 30 × (1 − 0.4) = 30 × 0.6 = 18.

💡 Hint

Rearrange: multiply both sides by (1 − r).

Card 1281.3.4process
Question

u₁ = 12 and S∞ = 20. Find r.

Answer

1 − r = u₁ ÷ S∞ = 12 ÷ 20 = 0.6, so r = 0.4.

💡 Hint

Sub into S∞ = u₁ ÷ (1 − r) and isolate r.

Card 1291.3.4concept
Question

r = −0.6. Does S∞ exist? Explain.

Answer

Yes. |r| = |−0.6| = 0.6 < 1 ✓. Negative r is fine — |r| strips the sign.

💡 Hint

|r| means absolute value. Strip the minus.

Card 1301.3.4concept
Question

Exam rule: what must you write before calculating S∞?

Answer

State: |r| < 1 ✓. IB mark schemes award this step — you earn the method mark even if the final answer is wrong.

💡 Hint

Never skip the check. It is worth marks on its own.

Card 1311.9.1formula
Question

State the three log laws (same base a).

Answer

log(xy) = log x + log y; log(x/y) = log x − log y; log(xⁿ) = n log x.

Card 1321.9.1concept
Question

What does logₐ x = y mean in index form?

Answer

aʸ = x — 'the power of a that gives x'. Logs and powers are inverse operations.

Card 1331.9.1formula
Question

What is the change-of-base rule?

Answer

logₐ x = log x / log a = ln x / ln a (number on top, old base on the bottom).

Card 1341.9.1concept
Question

How do you solve aˣ = b for x?

Answer

Take logs both sides: x log a = log b, so x = log b / log a (the doubling-time / half-life move).

Card 1351.9.1concept
Question

How do you solve logₐ N = k?

Answer

Rewrite in index form: N = aᵏ. Then check the inside of the log is positive.

Card 1361.9.1formula
Question

What are logₐ 1 and logₐ a?

Answer

logₐ 1 = 0 (a⁰ = 1) and logₐ a = 1 (a¹ = a).

Card 1371.9.1concept
Question

Why must you check the domain after solving a log equation?

Answer

Logs are only defined for positive inputs; reject any solution that makes the inside ≤ 0, even if the algebra allows it.

Card 1381.9.1concept
Question

Write 2 log P + log Q − log 5 as one logarithm.

Answer

log(P²Q / 5) — power law first, then product (add) and quotient (subtract).

Card 1392.1.1definition
Question

What does the gradient of a straight line measure?

Answer

The gradient measures the steepness and direction of a line — how much y changes for every 1 unit increase in x. Positive gradient → rises left to right. Negative gradient → falls left to right. Zero gradient → horizontal line.

Card 1402.1.1concept
Question

A line goes up 8 units for every 2 units moved to the right. What is the gradient?

Answer

Gradient = rise ÷ run = 8 ÷ 2 = 4. The line goes up by 4 for every 1 unit to the right. This is a positive, fairly steep gradient.

Card 1412.1.1concept
Question

What does a gradient of −5 tell you about the line?

Answer

The line falls steeply — for every 1 unit moved right, y drops by 5. Steepness = |−5| = 5 (compare using absolute value). The negative sign means it slopes downward from left to right.

Card 1422.1.1concept
Question

Exam trap: Lines have gradients −4 and 3. A student says gradient 3 is steeper because 3 > −4. Correct this.

Answer

Wrong — steepness uses absolute value: |−4| = 4 > |3| = 3. The line with gradient −4 is steeper. Never compare signed gradient values to decide steepness — always compare |m₁| and |m₂|.

Card 1432.1.1formula
Question

State the formula for gradient between two points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂).

Answer

m = (y₂ − y₁) / (x₂ − x₁) The y-change (rise) goes on top. The x-change (run) goes on the bottom. Use the same pair order for both: subtract in the same direction.

Card 1442.1.1formula
Question

Find the gradient of the line through (3, 1) and (7, 9).

Answer

m = (9 − 1) / (7 − 3) = 8 / 4 = 2. y increased and x increased → positive gradient makes sense. ✓

Card 1452.1.1formula
Question

Find the gradient of the line through (−2, 5) and (4, −1).

Answer

m = (−1 − 5) / (4 − (−2)) = −6 / 6 = −1. Key step: 4 − (−2) = 4 + 2 = 6. Subtracting a negative flips the sign.

Card 1462.1.1concept
Question

Exam trap: A student writes m = (x₂ − x₁)/(y₂ − y₁). What is the error and how do you avoid it?

Answer

They have swapped Δy and Δx. The gradient formula is m = Δy/Δx, not Δx/Δy. Fix: always write the formula first — m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁) — before substituting numbers.

Card 1472.1.1definition
Question

What is the y-intercept of a straight line?

Answer

The y-intercept is the point where the line crosses the y-axis — the value of y when x = 0. In y = mx + c, the y-intercept is c, the constant term. Example: y = 4x − 7 has y-intercept = −7, so it crosses at (0, −7).

Card 1482.1.1formula
Question

In y = mx + c, which letter is the gradient and which is the y-intercept?

Answer

m is the gradient — it is the coefficient of x. c is the y-intercept — it is the constant term. Example: y = −2x + 9 → gradient = −2, y-intercept = 9.

Card 1492.1.1formula
Question

State the gradient and y-intercept of y = −3x + 7. Then write down the coordinates of the y-intercept.

Answer

Gradient m = −3. y-intercept c = 7. Coordinates of y-intercept: (0, 7).

Card 1502.1.1concept
Question

Exam trap: A student reads y = 5 − 3x and writes gradient = 5, y-intercept = −3. What went wrong?

Answer

The equation is not in y = mx + c order. Rewrite: y = −3x + 5. Gradient m = −3, y-intercept c = 5. Always rearrange into y = mx + c form before reading off m and c.

Card 1512.1.1concept
Question

What is the gradient of a horizontal line? What about a vertical line?

Answer

Horizontal line: gradient = 0 (no rise — Δy = 0). Vertical line: gradient is undefined — Δx = 0, so we would divide by zero.

Card 1522.1.1concept
Question

How do you decide which of two lines is steeper?

Answer

Compare the absolute values of their gradients. The line with the larger |m| is steeper. Example: |−5| = 5 > |2| = 2, so y = −5x is steeper than y = 2x.

Card 1532.1.1concept
Question

Line A: y = −3x + 1. Line B: y = 4x − 5. Which crosses the y-axis higher? Which is steeper?

Answer

y-intercepts: A → c = 1, B → c = −5. Line A crosses higher. Steepness: |−3| = 3 vs |4| = 4. Line B is steeper. Two different comparisons — do them separately.

Card 1542.1.1concept
Question

Exam trap: A student has y = −(1/3)x + 9. They write gradient = 1/3. What is wrong?

Answer

They dropped the negative sign. The gradient is m = −1/3 (negative, because it is − times 1/3). The y-intercept is 9. Read the coefficient of x including its sign.

Card 1552.1.2definition
Question

What is the slope-intercept form of a straight line?

Answer

y = mx + c m = gradient (slope), c = y-intercept. This form directly shows both key features of the line.

Card 1562.1.2formula
Question

Write the equation of a line with gradient 5 and y-intercept −3.

Answer

Substitute directly into y = mx + c: y = 5x − 3. The gradient goes with x; the y-intercept is the constant.

Card 1572.1.2concept
Question

A line has equation y = −(1/2)x + 6. Write down the gradient and y-intercept and describe the direction of the line.

Answer

Gradient m = −1/2. y-intercept c = 6. The line starts high on the y-axis and falls gently — it goes down 1 for every 2 units to the right.

Card 1582.1.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A student writes the equation of a line as "m = 3, c = 7" and stops. What must they write instead?

Answer

IB always requires a full equation, not just the values of m and c. Write: y = 3x + 7. The equation must start with "y =" and show both m and c in the correct form.

Card 1592.1.2concept
Question

Describe the method for finding the equation of a line given its gradient and one point on the line.

Answer

1. Write y = mx + c with the known gradient m. 2. Substitute the coordinates of the given point for x and y. 3. Solve for c. 4. Write the full equation with both m and c.

Card 1602.1.2formula
Question

Find the equation of the line with gradient 3 that passes through (2, 8).

Answer

y = 3x + c. Substitute (2, 8): 8 = 3(2) + c → 8 = 6 + c → c = 2. Equation: y = 3x + 2.

Card 1612.1.2formula
Question

Find the equation of the line with gradient −2 that passes through (−1, 5).

Answer

y = −2x + c. Substitute (−1, 5): 5 = −2(−1) + c → 5 = 2 + c → c = 3. Equation: y = −2x + 3. Check: plug in x = −1: y = −2(−1) + 3 = 5 ✓

Card 1622.1.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A student finds c = 4 but writes the final equation as y = mx + 4 without substituting m. What is the issue?

Answer

They left m as a letter instead of replacing it with the actual gradient value. If gradient = 2 and c = 4, the equation must be: y = 2x + 4. Always replace m with its value in the final answer.

Card 1632.1.2concept
Question

What are the two steps to find the equation of a line through two given points?

Answer

Step 1: Calculate the gradient using m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁). Step 2: Use one point and the gradient to find c (substitute into y = mx + c).

Card 1642.1.2formula
Question

Find the equation of the line through (1, 4) and (3, 10).

Answer

m = (10 − 4)/(3 − 1) = 6/2 = 3. y = 3x + c. Use (1, 4): 4 = 3(1) + c → c = 1. Equation: y = 3x + 1.

Card 1652.1.2formula
Question

Find the equation of the line through (0, −3) and (4, 5).

Answer

m = (5 − (−3))/(4 − 0) = 8/4 = 2. y-intercept: when x = 0, y = −3, so c = −3 directly. Equation: y = 2x − 3. Shortcut: if one point is the y-intercept (x = 0), c = that y-value immediately.

Card 1662.1.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A student uses two points to find the gradient m = 4, then writes y = 4x without finding c. What must they still do?

Answer

They must use one of the given points to substitute into y = 4x + c and solve for c. The equation y = 4x only works if the line passes through the origin — that must be verified, not assumed.

Card 1672.1.2definition
Question

What is the general form of a straight line equation?

Answer

ax + by + d = 0 (sometimes written ax + by = c). All terms are moved to one side, leaving zero on the other. IB accepts both y = mx + c and general form unless the question specifies which.

Card 1682.1.2formula
Question

Rearrange y = 3x − 5 into the form ax + by + d = 0 with integer coefficients.

Answer

Move all terms to the left: 3x − y − 5 = 0. Or equivalently: −3x + y + 5 = 0 (both are valid; IB usually wants positive leading coefficient).

Card 1692.1.2formula
Question

Convert 2x − y + 8 = 0 back into y = mx + c form and state the gradient and y-intercept.

Answer

Rearrange: y = 2x + 8. Gradient m = 2, y-intercept c = 8.

Card 1702.1.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A question asks for the equation of a line "in the form ax + by + d = 0." A student writes y = 2x − 4. How many marks will they lose?

Answer

IB requires the specific form asked for. Leaving it as y = 2x − 4 does not match ax + by + d = 0. Correct: 2x − y − 4 = 0. Always re-read what form the question requires before writing the final answer.

Card 1712.1.3definition
Question

What is the condition for two lines to be parallel?

Answer

Two lines are parallel if and only if they have the same gradient. They never intersect (unless they are the same line). Example: y = 3x + 2 and y = 3x − 7 are parallel — both have m = 3.

Card 1722.1.3formula
Question

Line L₁ has gradient m. State the gradient of any line parallel to L₁.

Answer

Any line parallel to L₁ also has gradient m. The gradient is the same — only the y-intercept (c) can differ.

Card 1732.1.3concept
Question

Are y = −2x + 5 and y = −2x − 3 parallel? Explain why.

Answer

Yes — both have gradient m = −2. They are different lines (different y-intercepts: 5 and −3), so they are parallel, not the same line.

Card 1742.1.3concept
Question

Exam trap: A student sees y = 2x + 1 and y = −2x + 1 and says they are parallel because "they look similar." Are they parallel?

Answer

No — gradients are +2 and −2. These are different gradients, so the lines are not parallel. They intersect at (0, 1). Similar equations do not mean parallel lines — the gradient values must match exactly.

Card 1752.1.3definition
Question

What is the condition for two lines to be perpendicular?

Answer

Two lines are perpendicular if the product of their gradients equals −1: m₁ × m₂ = −1. This means the gradients are negative reciprocals of each other.

Card 1762.1.3formula
Question

If a line has gradient m, state the gradient of a line perpendicular to it.

Answer

The perpendicular gradient is −1/m (flip the fraction and change the sign). Examples: m = 3 → m⊥ = −1/3 m = −2/5 → m⊥ = 5/2 m = 4 → m⊥ = −1/4

Card 1772.1.3formula
Question

A line has gradient −3/4. Find the gradient of a perpendicular line.

Answer

m⊥ = −1 / (−3/4) = 4/3. Rule: flip the fraction (4/3) and change the sign. Starting negative → perpendicular is positive. Check: (−3/4) × (4/3) = −12/12 = −1 ✓

Card 1782.1.3concept
Question

Exam trap: A line has gradient 5. A student says the perpendicular gradient is −5. What is the error?

Answer

They only changed the sign but did not take the reciprocal. The perpendicular gradient is −1/5 (flip to 1/5, then negate). "Negative reciprocal" means both steps: flip AND change sign.

Card 1792.1.3concept
Question

Describe the method to find the equation of a line parallel to y = 4x − 1 through the point (3, 7).

Answer

1. Identify the gradient: m = 4 (same as the original line — parallel). 2. Substitute into y = 4x + c using (3, 7): 7 = 4(3) + c → c = −5. 3. Equation: y = 4x − 5.

Card 1802.1.3formula
Question

Find the equation of the line perpendicular to y = 2x + 3 that passes through (4, 1).

Answer

m⊥ = −1/2. y = −(1/2)x + c. Use (4, 1): 1 = −(1/2)(4) + c → 1 = −2 + c → c = 3. Equation: y = −(1/2)x + 3.

Card 1812.1.3formula
Question

A line L₁ has equation y = −3x + 2. Find the equation of the line L₂, perpendicular to L₁, that passes through (0, 5).

Answer

m⊥ = 1/3 (negative reciprocal of −3). The line passes through (0, 5), so c = 5 directly (it is the y-intercept). Equation of L₂: y = (1/3)x + 5.

Card 1822.1.3concept
Question

Exam trap: When writing a perpendicular line equation, a student uses the original gradient from the question instead of the negative reciprocal. What is the consequence?

Answer

Their answer will be a parallel line, not a perpendicular one — a completely different type of answer. Always find m⊥ = −1/m first, before substituting the given point to find c.

Card 1832.1.3definition
Question

What is the perpendicular bisector of a line segment AB?

Answer

The perpendicular bisector is a line that: 1. Passes through the midpoint of AB. 2. Is perpendicular to AB (i.e. meets AB at a right angle). Every point on the perpendicular bisector is equidistant from A and B.

Card 1842.1.3concept
Question

What two things do you need in order to write the equation of the perpendicular bisector of segment AB?

Answer

1. The midpoint of AB — the perpendicular bisector passes through this point. 2. The perpendicular gradient — find the gradient of AB first, then take the negative reciprocal.

Card 1852.1.3formula
Question

Find the equation of the perpendicular bisector of the segment joining A(2, 4) and B(6, 8).

Answer

Midpoint M = ((2+6)/2, (4+8)/2) = (4, 6). Gradient of AB: m = (8−4)/(6−2) = 4/4 = 1. So m⊥ = −1. y = −x + c. Use (4, 6): 6 = −4 + c → c = 10. Perpendicular bisector: y = −x + 10.

Card 1862.1.3concept
Question

Exam trap: When finding a perpendicular bisector, a student finds the midpoint correctly but then uses one of the original endpoints to find c instead of the midpoint. What goes wrong?

Answer

The line will pass through the wrong point — it will be perpendicular to AB but not at the midpoint. The perpendicular bisector must pass through the midpoint, not through A or B. Always substitute the midpoint to find c.

Card 1872.1.4definition
Question

What is a linear model? When is a situation suitable for one?

Answer

A linear model describes a situation where the output increases or decreases at a constant rate as the input changes. It has the form y = mx + c. Use it when: the rate of change is constant (e.g. fixed cost per unit, steady temperature drop).

Card 1882.1.4formula
Question

A taxi charges $2.50 per km plus a $4 booking fee. Write this as a linear model for total cost C in terms of distance d.

Answer

C = 2.5d + 4. Gradient m = 2.50 (cost per km). y-intercept c = 4 (fixed booking fee — the cost when d = 0).

Card 1892.1.4concept
Question

A phone plan charges $0.15 per minute and has a $10 monthly fee. Write the monthly cost C as a model and find the cost for 40 minutes.

Answer

Model: C = 0.15t + 10. When t = 40: C = 0.15(40) + 10 = 6 + 10 = $16.

Card 1902.1.4concept
Question

Exam trap: A student sees a word problem with a fixed charge and a per-unit charge, and writes the per-unit charge as c and the fixed charge as m. What is the error?

Answer

They have swapped m and c. m (gradient) = the rate — the amount added per unit (per km, per hour, etc.). c (y-intercept) = the fixed starting value — the value when the variable equals 0.

Card 1912.1.4definition
Question

In a linear model y = mx + c, what does the gradient m represent in context?

Answer

The gradient is the rate of change — how much y changes for each 1-unit increase in x. Examples: • m = 3 km/h → speed of 3 km per hour. • m = −50 → value decreases by 50 per unit. Always state the units when interpreting.

Card 1922.1.4definition
Question

In a linear model y = mx + c, what does the y-intercept c represent in context?

Answer

The y-intercept is the initial value — the value of y when x = 0. Examples: • c = 200 → 200 items in stock at the start. • c = 15 → the temperature was 15°C at time 0. It is the starting point before any change occurs.

Card 1932.1.4concept
Question

A model gives cost C = 8t + 25, where t is time in hours. Interpret the gradient and y-intercept.

Answer

Gradient m = 8: the cost increases by $8 per hour. y-intercept c = 25: the initial cost (before any time passes) is $25 — a fixed/setup fee.

Card 1942.1.4concept
Question

Exam trap: A student interprets the gradient as "50" without any units or context. Why will they lose a mark?

Answer

IB requires contextual interpretation — the gradient must be described in terms of the variables in the problem. For example: "The cost increases by $50 per kilogram." Just stating the number "50" earns no credit for an interpretation question.

Card 1952.1.4concept
Question

What two pieces of information do you need to write a linear model from a word problem?

Answer

1. The rate of change (→ this becomes m). 2. An initial value or a specific data point (→ this lets you find c). If two data points are given, find m first using the gradient formula, then find c.

Card 1962.1.4formula
Question

A pool contains 800 litres and is draining at 60 litres per minute. Write a model V(t) for the volume after t minutes.

Answer

V = −60t + 800. m = −60 (rate of decrease — negative because draining). c = 800 (starting volume at t = 0).

Card 1972.1.4formula
Question

A car rental costs $180 for 3 days and $300 for 7 days. Write a linear model for cost C in terms of days d.

Answer

m = (300 − 180)/(7 − 3) = 120/4 = 30. C = 30d + c. Use (3, 180): 180 = 30(3) + c → c = 90. Model: C = 30d + 90 (daily rate $30, fixed fee $90).

Card 1982.1.4concept
Question

Exam trap: A situation says "temperature falls 3°C every hour." A student writes m = 3 (positive). What is the mistake?

Answer

A decrease means a negative gradient: m = −3. When a quantity is falling or decreasing, the gradient must be negative. Always check the direction of change before assigning the sign to m.

Card 1992.1.4concept
Question

How do you use a linear model to make a prediction?

Answer

Substitute the given input value for x into the model equation and calculate y. Example: If C = 12t + 30 and t = 4, then C = 12(4) + 30 = 78.

Card 2002.1.4concept
Question

What is the difference between interpolation and extrapolation when using a model?

Answer

Interpolation: predicting within the range of the original data — generally reliable. Extrapolation: predicting outside the range of the original data — less reliable; the model may not hold. IB questions often award 1 mark for commenting on reliability.

Card 2012.1.4concept
Question

Model: P = −3t + 120 gives population P (hundreds) after t years. Find when the population reaches zero. Is this prediction reliable if data was collected for t = 0 to 20?

Answer

Set P = 0: 0 = −3t + 120 → t = 40 years. This is extrapolation (t = 40 is beyond the data range of 0–20) — the prediction is less reliable.

Card 2022.1.4concept
Question

Exam trap: "Is the prediction reliable?" A student simply answers "yes" or "no" without a reason. Will they get the mark?

Answer

No — IB always requires a reason for reliability judgements. A correct answer gives: (a) whether it is interpolation or extrapolation, and (b) a reason (e.g. "within the data range" or "outside the data range — the trend may not continue").

Card 2032.10.1concept
Question

Which graph straightens a power law y = a·xⁿ?

Answer

Log-log: plot log y against log x. It's straight, with gradient n and intercept log a.

Card 2042.10.1concept
Question

Which graph straightens an exponential law y = a·bˣ?

Answer

Semi-log: plot log y against x. It's straight, with gradient log b and intercept log a.

Card 2052.10.1concept
Question

Why take logs of y = a·xⁿ?

Answer

log y = log a + n·log x is LINEAR in log x, so a curved power law becomes a straight line you can read.

Card 2062.10.1formula
Question

On a log-log line for y = a·xⁿ, what is the gradient?

Answer

The power n.

Card 2072.10.1formula
Question

On a semi-log line for y = a·bˣ, what is the gradient?

Answer

log b (so b = 10^gradient).

Card 2082.10.1concept
Question

How do you recover a from a log-log or semi-log intercept?

Answer

The intercept is log a, so a = 10^(intercept).

Card 2092.10.1concept
Question

How do you choose between a power and an exponential model from data?

Answer

Linearise both ways and compare R² — the fit with R² closer to 1 is straighter, so that's the model.

Card 2102.10.1concept
Question

Semi-log gives gradient 0.3, intercept 2 for y = a·bˣ. Find a and b.

Answer

a = 10² = 100; b = 10^0.3 ≈ 2.00, so y ≈ 100·2ˣ.

Card 2112.2.1definition
Question

What is a function?

Answer

A function is a rule that assigns exactly one output to each input. Every input (x-value) maps to one and only one output (y-value). Example: f maps every temperature in °C to a temperature in °F — one input, one output.

Card 2122.2.1concept
Question

A mapping shows: 1 → 5, 2 → 7, 3 → 5. Is this a function? What about 1 → 5, 1 → 9, 2 → 7?

Answer

First mapping (1→5, 2→7, 3→5): YES, this is a function. Two inputs (1 and 3) share the same output — that is allowed. Second mapping (1→5, 1→9): NOT a function. Input 1 maps to two different outputs — that breaks the rule.

Card 2132.2.1concept
Question

Give a real-world example of a function and explain why it qualifies.

Answer

Example: "Country → Capital city." Each country has exactly one capital — every input (country) maps to exactly one output (capital). Non-example: "Person → Friend" — a person can have many friends, so one input maps to many outputs.

Card 2142.2.1concept
Question

Exam trap: Can two different inputs map to the same output in a function?

Answer

Yes — this is perfectly fine and does NOT stop something from being a function. What is NOT allowed: one input mapping to two different outputs. Example: f(2) = 5 and f(3) = 5 is fine. But f(2) = 5 and f(2) = 9 means it is not a function.

Card 2152.2.1definition
Question

What does the notation f(x) mean?

Answer

f(x) is the output of the function f when the input is x. Read it as "f of x." f is the name of the function. x is the input. f(x) is the corresponding output. Example: if f(x) = 2x + 1, then f(3) = 7.

Card 2162.2.1formula
Question

Rewrite y = 4x − 3 using function notation.

Answer

f(x) = 4x − 3. Replace y with f(x). The name "f" is conventional but any letter works (g, h, p, etc.). Both y = 4x − 3 and f(x) = 4x − 3 describe the same rule.

Card 2172.2.1concept
Question

g(x) = x² + 1. What does g(t) mean? What does g(a + 1) mean?

Answer

g(t): apply the same rule but with t as the input → g(t) = t² + 1. g(a + 1): replace every x with (a + 1) → g(a + 1) = (a + 1)² + 1. The letter inside the bracket is always the input — substitute it everywhere x appears.

Card 2182.2.1concept
Question

Exam trap: A student writes "f(x) means f multiplied by x." What is the error?

Answer

f(x) is not multiplication — the parentheses here mean "function of," not "times." f(x) = 4x + 2 does not mean f × x = 4x + 2. f is the function name; f(x) is the output value when the input is x.

Card 2192.2.1concept
Question

How do you evaluate f(a) given a function f(x)?

Answer

Substitute a for every x in the function rule, then simplify. Example: f(x) = 3x + 5. Find f(4). Replace x with 4: f(4) = 3(4) + 5 = 12 + 5 = 17.

Card 2202.2.1formula
Question

f(x) = 2x − 7. Find f(3) and f(0).

Answer

f(3) = 2(3) − 7 = 6 − 7 = −1. f(0) = 2(0) − 7 = 0 − 7 = −7. f(0) gives the y-intercept of the function.

Card 2212.2.1formula
Question

h(x) = x² − 4x + 1. Find h(−2).

Answer

Replace x with −2: h(−2) = (−2)² − 4(−2) + 1 = 4 + 8 + 1 = 13. Key: (−2)² = 4 (positive). −4(−2) = +8 (negative times negative = positive).

Card 2222.2.1concept
Question

Exam trap: f(x) = x² + 3. A student evaluates f(−4) = −4² + 3 = −16 + 3 = −13. What is wrong?

Answer

The error is in −4². When substituting a negative number, use brackets: (−4)² = +16. Without brackets: −4² = −16 (squaring only 4, then negating — wrong). Correct: f(−4) = (−4)² + 3 = 16 + 3 = 19.

Card 2232.2.1definition
Question

What is the vertical line test and what does it tell you?

Answer

The vertical line test: draw (or imagine) any vertical line through a graph. If every vertical line crosses the graph at most once → the graph represents a function. If any vertical line crosses the graph more than once → it is NOT a function (one x has two y-values).

Card 2242.2.1concept
Question

Does a full circle (e.g. x² + y² = 9) represent a function? Explain using the vertical line test.

Answer

No — a vertical line through the centre of the circle crosses it twice (two y-values for one x). Since one input (x) gives two outputs (y), the circle fails the vertical line test and is not a function.

Card 2252.2.1concept
Question

Does the graph of y = |x| (V-shape) represent a function? Why?

Answer

Yes — every vertical line crosses the V-shape exactly once. Although the V looks like two lines meeting at a point, each x-value still gives exactly one y-value. y = |x| passes the vertical line test and is a function.

Card 2262.2.1concept
Question

Exam trap: A student says "the vertical line test checks if every y-value is produced by only one x." Is this correct?

Answer

No — this describes a one-to-one function (injective), not just any function. The vertical line test only checks if each x gives at most one y. It is fine for two different x-values to produce the same y (many-to-one is still a function).

Card 2272.2.2definition
Question

What is the domain of a function?

Answer

The domain is the set of all valid input values (x-values) for which the function is defined. Example: f(x) = √x has domain x ≥ 0 because you cannot take the square root of a negative number.

Card 2282.2.2concept
Question

What two things most commonly restrict the natural domain of a function?

Answer

1. Division by zero — values of x that make the denominator = 0 must be excluded. Example: f(x) = 1/(x − 3) → x ≠ 3. 2. Square root of a negative — the expression inside √ must be ≥ 0. Example: f(x) = √(x + 4) → x ≥ −4.

Card 2292.2.2formula
Question

State the natural domain of f(x) = √(x − 5). Show your reasoning.

Answer

The expression inside √ must be ≥ 0: x − 5 ≥ 0 → x ≥ 5. Domain: x ≥ 5 (or [5, ∞) in interval notation). At x = 5: f(5) = √0 = 0 ✓. At x = 4: f(4) = √(−1) — undefined ✗.

Card 2302.2.2concept
Question

Exam trap: f(x) = 1/(x² − 9). A student says the domain excludes x = 9. What is the mistake?

Answer

The denominator is x² − 9 = (x − 3)(x + 3). This equals zero when x = 3 or x = −3. The domain excludes x = 3 and x = −3, not x = 9. Always set the denominator equal to 0 and solve — do not guess.

Card 2312.2.2definition
Question

What is the range of a function?

Answer

The range is the set of all possible output values (y-values) that the function can produce. Example: f(x) = x² has range y ≥ 0 because squaring any real number gives a non-negative result.

Card 2322.2.2concept
Question

Why is the range of f(x) = x² equal to y ≥ 0? Why not all real numbers?

Answer

Squaring any real number always gives a non-negative result: (−3)² = 9, 0² = 0. The output can never be negative. So no matter what x you input, f(x) ≥ 0. The minimum value is 0 (at x = 0); the function grows without limit as x → ±∞.

Card 2332.2.2formula
Question

State the range of g(x) = x² + 3 for all real x.

Answer

Since x² ≥ 0, we have x² + 3 ≥ 3. Range: g(x) ≥ 3 (or [3, ∞)). The minimum value is 3, reached at x = 0: g(0) = 0 + 3 = 3.

Card 2342.2.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A student gives the range of f(x) = √x as "all real numbers." Why is this wrong?

Answer

The square root function only outputs non-negative values: √x ≥ 0 for all x ≥ 0. Correct range: f(x) ≥ 0 (or [0, ∞)). The function cannot produce negative outputs — √9 = 3, not ±3.

Card 2352.2.2concept
Question

How do you read the domain of a function from its graph?

Answer

Look at the graph horizontally — the domain is the set of x-values covered by the graph. Find the leftmost and rightmost x-values. Filled circle (●) = endpoint included. Open circle (○) = endpoint not included.

Card 2362.2.2concept
Question

How do you read the range of a function from its graph?

Answer

Look at the graph vertically — the range is the set of y-values covered by the graph. Find the lowest and highest y-values reached by the graph. A filled dot means that y-value is included; an open dot means it is excluded.

Card 2372.2.2formula
Question

A graph runs from x = −2 to x = 6 (both endpoints included) and the y-values go from −3 to 8 (both included). State the domain and range.

Answer

Domain: −2 ≤ x ≤ 6. Range: −3 ≤ y ≤ 8 (or −3 ≤ f(x) ≤ 8). IB also accepts interval notation: domain [−2, 6], range [−3, 8].

Card 2382.2.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A student is asked for the domain of a graph and reads off the y-values instead of x-values. What rule helps avoid this?

Answer

Domain → x-axis (horizontal). Range → y-axis (vertical). Memory trick: "D for domain, D for direction left-right (x-axis)." Domain = span of x-values; range = span of y-values.

Card 2392.2.2definition
Question

What is a restricted domain and when does it occur in real-world problems?

Answer

A restricted domain limits the valid inputs to a practical range — not all mathematical values make sense. Examples: • Time t: must be t ≥ 0 (time cannot be negative). • Number of items n: must be a positive integer (you cannot buy half an item). • Distance d: must be d ≥ 0.

Card 2402.2.2concept
Question

A pool drains at 80 L/min. The model is V(t) = 1200 − 80t. State an appropriate domain and explain.

Answer

Domain: 0 ≤ t ≤ 15. t ≥ 0: time cannot be negative. t ≤ 15: V(15) = 1200 − 80(15) = 0 — the pool is empty; the model stops being valid.

Card 2412.2.2concept
Question

A function is defined only for x ∈ [2, 10]. A student substitutes x = 11. Is this valid?

Answer

No — x = 11 is outside the domain [2, 10]. The function is not defined for x = 11; the output is meaningless in this context. Always check inputs are within the stated domain before calculating.

Card 2422.2.2concept
Question

Exam trap: A model gives profit P(n) = 5n − 200, where n is the number of units sold. A student treats the domain as all real numbers. What is wrong?

Answer

n must be a non-negative integer (you cannot sell −3.7 units). A more appropriate domain is n ∈ {0, 1, 2, 3, ...} or n ≥ 0 with n ∈ ℤ. IB context questions often award a mark for recognising this restriction.

Card 2432.3.1definition
Question

What does every point (x, y) on a function graph tell you?

Answer

It tells you that when the input is x, the output is y — i.e. f(x) = y. The x-axis shows inputs; the y-axis shows outputs.

Card 2442.3.1concept
Question

The graph of f passes through (3, 7). What is f(3)?

Answer

f(3) = 7. Read the y-value at x = 3 directly from the graph.

Card 2452.3.1concept
Question

How do you find f(4) from a graph?

Answer

Locate x = 4 on the horizontal axis, go straight up to the curve, then read across to the y-axis. That y-value is f(4).

Card 2462.3.1concept
Question

A graph passes through (0, −5) and (4, 3). What is f(0)?

Answer

f(0) = −5. The point (0, −5) is on the graph, so when x = 0 the output is −5.

Card 2472.3.1concept
Question

IB asks you to "sketch" a graph. What minimum features must you show?

Answer

Shape of the curve, any x- and y-intercepts, turning points (if present), and asymptotes (if relevant). Label key values. Accuracy matters less than the correct shape and labelled features.

Card 2482.3.1definition
Question

Which function families produce each shape: straight line, U-shape, J-curve, wave?

Answer

Straight line → linear. U-shape → quadratic. J-curve → exponential. Wave → sinusoidal.

Card 2492.3.1concept
Question

How do you sketch y = −2x + 6?

Answer

y-intercept at (0, 6). Gradient = −2: from (0, 6), go right 1 and down 2 to reach (1, 4). Draw a straight line through both points and label the y-intercept.

Card 2502.3.1concept
Question

A quadratic opens downward. What does this tell you about coefficient a?

Answer

a < 0. The parabola has a maximum (peak) at the vertex. If a > 0 it opens upward with a minimum.

Card 2512.3.1concept
Question

IB says "Write down f(2)." How do you answer from a graph?

Answer

Go to x = 2 on the horizontal axis, read straight up to the curve, then across to the y-axis. Write the y-value you find. "Write down" means no working is needed.

Card 2522.3.1concept
Question

From a graph, how do you find x when f(x) = 5?

Answer

Draw a horizontal line at y = 5. Where it meets the curve, read straight down to the x-axis. There may be more than one solution.

Card 2532.3.1concept
Question

A graph shows f(x) = 0 at x = −1 and x = 3. What does this mean?

Answer

The function has two x-intercepts (zeros/roots) at x = −1 and x = 3. The curve crosses the x-axis at those points.

Card 2542.3.1concept
Question

IB allows ±0.2 tolerance when reading values from a graph. Why?

Answer

Printed graphs have limited precision. As long as your reading is within 0.2 of the true value, the mark is awarded. Always read as carefully as possible.

Card 2552.3.1concept
Question

How can you tell an exponential graph from a quadratic graph?

Answer

Exponential: approaches a horizontal asymptote (y → 0 as x → −∞), never crosses the x-axis (if a > 0). Quadratic: has a vertex (turning point), usually has two x-intercepts, is symmetric.

Card 2562.3.1definition
Question

A graph approaches y = 4 as x → ∞ but never quite reaches it. What feature is this?

Answer

A horizontal asymptote at y = 4. The curve gets arbitrarily close but never equals 4.

Card 2572.3.1concept
Question

A function graph has two turning points. What types could it be?

Answer

A cubic polynomial or a sinusoidal function. A quadratic has only one turning point; two suggests a higher-degree polynomial or a periodic function.

Card 2582.3.1concept
Question

An exponential model y = a · bˣ with b > 1 is graphed. As x → ∞, what happens to y?

Answer

y → ∞. The graph grows without bound — steeper and steeper. As x → −∞, y → 0 (horizontal asymptote).

Card 2592.3.2definition
Question

Define x-intercept and y-intercept.

Answer

x-intercept: where the graph crosses the x-axis — this is where y = 0. y-intercept: where the graph crosses the y-axis — this is where x = 0.

Card 2602.3.2concept
Question

Can a function have more than one y-intercept?

Answer

No. A function produces exactly one output for x = 0, so there is exactly one y-intercept. However, a function can have zero, one, or many x-intercepts.

Card 2612.3.2concept
Question

A function has no x-intercept. What does this tell you about the graph?

Answer

The curve stays entirely above or below the x-axis — its output is never zero.

Card 2622.3.2definition
Question

IB uses the words "zeros", "roots", and "x-intercepts." What do they all mean?

Answer

All three refer to the values of x where f(x) = 0 — i.e. where the graph meets the x-axis. They are the same thing.

Card 2632.3.2formula
Question

How do you find the y-intercept of any function algebraically?

Answer

Substitute x = 0 into the function and calculate the output. The y-intercept is at the point (0, f(0)).

Card 2642.3.2concept
Question

Find the y-intercept of f(x) = x² − 3x + 7.

Answer

f(0) = 0 − 0 + 7 = 7. y-intercept is (0, 7).

Card 2652.3.2concept
Question

State the y-intercept of f(x) = 5 · 2ˣ.

Answer

f(0) = 5 · 2⁰ = 5 · 1 = 5. y-intercept is (0, 5). For any exponential y = a · bˣ, the y-intercept is always (0, a).

Card 2662.3.2concept
Question

Why is the y-intercept always the constant c in y = mx + c?

Answer

When x = 0: y = m(0) + c = c. So the line always meets the y-axis at the constant term.

Card 2672.3.2formula
Question

How do you find x-intercepts algebraically?

Answer

Set f(x) = 0 and solve. Each solution is an x-intercept (root/zero).

Card 2682.3.2concept
Question

Find the x-intercepts of f(x) = x² − x − 6.

Answer

Set x² − x − 6 = 0. Factor: (x − 3)(x + 2) = 0. So x = 3 or x = −2. x-intercepts are (3, 0) and (−2, 0).

Card 2692.3.2concept
Question

On Paper 2, IB asks "Find the zeros of f." What do you write?

Answer

The x-values where f(x) = 0, typically as coordinates: e.g. (−2, 0) and (3, 0), or just x = −2 and x = 3. Using the GDC Zero function is fine.

Card 2702.3.2concept
Question

A quadratic discriminant b² − 4ac < 0. What does this mean for x-intercepts?

Answer

No real x-intercepts — the parabola is entirely above or below the x-axis. The equation has no real solutions.

Card 2712.3.2concept
Question

The model h(t) = −5t² + 20t gives the height (m) of a ball. What do the x-intercepts represent?

Answer

Times when h = 0 — i.e. when the ball is on the ground: t = 0 (launch) and t = 4 (lands). x-intercepts are times, not heights.

Card 2722.3.2concept
Question

P(t) = 800 · 1.04ᵗ. What does the y-intercept represent?

Answer

P(0) = 800. The y-intercept is the initial population of 800 (at time t = 0).

Card 2732.3.2concept
Question

IB asks "State the meaning of the y-intercept in this context." How do you score the mark?

Answer

State what the y-intercept value represents using the context's real-world units and language. E.g. "800 is the initial population at the start of the study."

Card 2742.3.2concept
Question

C(n) = 120n + 400. What does the y-intercept 400 represent?

Answer

The fixed cost of 400 — even if n = 0 units are produced, the cost is still 400 (overhead/startup cost).

Card 2752.3.3definition
Question

What is the "viewing window" on a GDC?

Answer

The range of x and y values displayed on screen. Set using Xmin, Xmax, Ymin, Ymax. If the window is wrong, key features of the graph will be off-screen.

Card 2762.3.3concept
Question

You graph f(x) = x³ − 100x and see a flat line. What should you do?

Answer

The turning points are outside the default window. Zoom out — increase the x and y range (e.g. −15 to 15). Use ZoomFit or adjust Ymin/Ymax manually.

Card 2772.3.3concept
Question

Why should you always adjust the GDC window before reading off any values?

Answer

Key features (intercepts, turning points, asymptotes) may be off-screen in the default window. Missing them leads to incomplete or wrong answers.

Card 2782.3.3concept
Question

What does the "ZoomFit" feature on a GDC do?

Answer

Automatically adjusts the y-window to show all points of the graph within the current x-range. Use it when the default window shows nothing useful.

Card 2792.3.3formula
Question

How do you find x-intercepts (zeros) on a GDC?

Answer

Graph the function. Use 2nd → Calc → Zero (TI-84). Set a left bound and right bound on either side of each zero. The GDC gives the exact x-value.

Card 2802.3.3formula
Question

How do you find the intersection of two graphs on a GDC?

Answer

Graph both functions. Use 2nd → Calc → Intersect (TI-84). Move the cursor near the intersection and press Enter three times. The GDC gives both x and y coordinates.

Card 2812.3.3concept
Question

IB asks for the coordinates of the intersection of f(x) and g(x). The GDC shows x = 2.31. What must you also record?

Answer

The y-coordinate. Substitute x = 2.31 into either equation, or read y from the GDC screen. IB expects both coordinates: e.g. (2.31, 5.62).

Card 2822.3.3concept
Question

Alternative GDC method: how can you find where f(x) = g(x) without using Intersect?

Answer

Graph h(x) = f(x) − g(x) and find its zeros using the Zero function. Where h(x) = 0 is exactly where f(x) = g(x).

Card 2832.3.3formula
Question

How do you find a local maximum on a GDC (TI-84)?

Answer

Graph f(x). Use 2nd → Calc → Maximum. Set a left bound before the peak and a right bound after it. The GDC returns both x and y coordinates of the maximum.

Card 2842.3.3concept
Question

IB asks for coordinates of a local minimum. What exactly must you write?

Answer

Both the x and y coordinates as a pair: e.g. (2, −3). Never write only the x-value — that loses the second mark.

Card 2852.3.3concept
Question

A cubic has two turning points. How do you find both on the GDC?

Answer

Use Maximum for the peak and Minimum for the trough — run them separately with appropriate bounds around each turning point.

Card 2862.3.3concept
Question

The GDC Maximum gives (1.5, 12). IB asks "What is the maximum value of f?" What do you write?

Answer

12. The maximum value is the y-coordinate of the turning point, not the x-coordinate.

Card 2872.3.3concept
Question

GDC shows intersection at x = 3.46, y = 8.92. How do you write this in an IB answer?

Answer

Write both coordinates clearly: x = 3.46, y = 8.92 (3 s.f. unless told otherwise). Or write the coordinate pair (3.46, 8.92).

Card 2882.3.3concept
Question

IB says "use your GDC" on Paper 2. Do you need to show algebraic working?

Answer

No — you must state the GDC result clearly (coordinates, equation, etc.) but no algebraic working is needed. Always write what you found, not how the GDC found it.

Card 2892.3.3concept
Question

When can you use a GDC — Paper 1 or Paper 2?

Answer

Paper 2 only. Paper 1 is the non-calculator paper. No GDC allowed on Paper 1.

Card 2902.3.3concept
Question

To how many significant figures should you round GDC results in IB answers?

Answer

3 significant figures (3 s.f.), unless the question specifies otherwise. Using more decimal places is not wrong but messy; using fewer can cost marks.

Card 2912.4.1definition
Question

Define a local maximum of a function.

Answer

A point where the function value is higher than all nearby values — the graph has a peak there. The function increases up to it and decreases after it.

Card 2922.4.1concept
Question

What is the difference between a maximum point and a maximum value?

Answer

Maximum point: both coordinates, e.g. (2, 9). Maximum value: just the y-value, e.g. 9. IB questions ask for either — read carefully.

Card 2932.4.1concept
Question

At a turning point, what is true about the gradient of the curve?

Answer

The gradient is zero at every turning point. The tangent line is horizontal there.

Card 2942.4.1concept
Question

Can a function have a local maximum that is lower than a local minimum elsewhere on the curve?

Answer

Yes — local max/min are only local (in a neighbourhood). The global maximum is the highest point overall, which may be different from any local maximum.

Card 2952.4.1concept
Question

The graph has a peak at (3, 8). Write down the local maximum.

Answer

Local maximum at (3, 8). The x-coordinate is 3 and the maximum value is 8. State both.

Card 2962.4.1concept
Question

IB asks "Write down the coordinates of the local minimum." What must your answer look like?

Answer

A coordinate pair: e.g. (−1, −5). Both x and y must be stated. Writing only x = −1 loses the second mark.

Card 2972.4.1concept
Question

A graph reaches a low point at (−2, 1). What is the minimum value of f?

Answer

1. The minimum value is the y-coordinate. The point (−2, 1) tells you the minimum occurs at x = −2, and the minimum value is 1.

Card 2982.4.1concept
Question

How do you identify a local minimum from a graph just by looking?

Answer

Look for a trough — a point where the graph changes from decreasing (falling) to increasing (rising). The curve dips down then comes back up.

Card 2992.4.1formula
Question

Steps to find a local maximum on a GDC (TI-84):

Answer

1. Graph f(x) with an appropriate window. 2. Press 2nd → Calc → Maximum. 3. Move left of the peak: press Enter (left bound). 4. Move right of the peak: press Enter (right bound). 5. Press Enter again (guess). GDC shows coordinates.

Card 3002.4.1concept
Question

GDC gives a minimum at x = 2.718. IB asks for the answer to 3 s.f. What do you write?

Answer

x = 2.72 (3 s.f.). Then substitute into f to find y, e.g. y = f(2.72). State both coordinates.

Card 3012.4.1concept
Question

Why must you always state y as well as x for a turning point?

Answer

IB markschemes award separate marks for each coordinate. Writing only x earns 0 marks for the y-coordinate. Always give both.

Card 3022.4.1concept
Question

A cubic has two turning points. GDC Maximum gives (−1, 4). What else should you find?

Answer

The local minimum. Run GDC Minimum with bounds around the other turning point to get its coordinates too.

Card 3032.4.1concept
Question

h(t) = −4t² + 24t. The maximum is at (3, 36). Interpret this in context.

Answer

After 3 seconds the ball reaches its highest point of 36 m above the ground.

Card 3042.4.1concept
Question

Profit P(n) has a maximum at (500, 8000). What does this mean?

Answer

Maximum profit of 8000 occurs when 500 units are produced. Producing more or fewer reduces profit.

Card 3052.4.1concept
Question

IB asks "Interpret the local maximum in context." How do you score the mark?

Answer

State what the x-value represents (e.g. time, units) and what the y-value represents (e.g. height, profit) using the context's specific units. E.g. "After 3 hours, temperature reaches its peak of 36°C."

Card 3062.4.1concept
Question

A profit model has a minimum at n = 10. What does this suggest about the business?

Answer

At n = 10 units, profit is at its lowest. The business loses the most money at this production level, and should either produce fewer or more units.

Card 3072.4.2definition
Question

Define an increasing function on an interval.

Answer

f is increasing on an interval if the output rises as you move left to right: whenever x₁ < x₂, we have f(x₁) < f(x₂). The graph goes upward.

Card 3082.4.2concept
Question

How can you tell a function is decreasing from its graph?

Answer

The graph moves downward as you read from left to right — outputs fall as inputs increase.

Card 3092.4.2concept
Question

At a local maximum, is the function increasing or decreasing immediately before it?

Answer

Increasing — the function rises up to the maximum, then begins decreasing after it.

Card 3102.4.2concept
Question

What notation does IB accept for stating intervals?

Answer

Inequalities (e.g. 1 < x < 4) and interval notation (e.g. (1, 4)) are both accepted. Write whichever matches the question's phrasing.

Card 3112.4.2concept
Question

A graph rises from x = −2 to x = 1, then falls. On what interval is f increasing?

Answer

f is increasing on −2 < x < 1 (or [−2, 1]).

Card 3122.4.2concept
Question

A function has a maximum at x = 2 and minimum at x = 5. State all increasing and decreasing intervals.

Answer

Increasing: x < 2 and x > 5. Decreasing: 2 < x < 5.

Card 3132.4.2concept
Question

IB asks "State the interval on which f is decreasing." What format is required?

Answer

An inequality or interval notation including both endpoints. E.g. 2 ≤ x ≤ 5 or [2, 5]. The interval must refer to x-values (inputs), not y-values.

Card 3142.4.2concept
Question

f(x) = x². On what interval is f decreasing?

Answer

For x < 0. The parabola falls from left toward x = 0, then rises for x > 0. The minimum is at (0, 0).

Card 3152.4.2concept
Question

A student writes "f is increasing at x = 3." What is wrong?

Answer

"Increasing at a point" is meaningless. Increasing is a property of an interval, not a single point. Write "f is increasing for x > 3" or "f is increasing on (1, 3)".

Card 3162.4.2concept
Question

IB asks for the "interval on which f is increasing." A student writes "f(x) increases from 4 to 9." What is wrong?

Answer

The answer should be an interval of x-values, not y-values. Correct: e.g. "1 < x < 3." The y-values (4 to 9) are outputs, not the interval.

Card 3172.4.2concept
Question

Should you include the endpoints of a turning point in an increasing interval? E.g. is the max at x = 2 included?

Answer

IB accepts both x < 2 and x ≤ 2 for the increasing interval up to a maximum. Either strict or inclusive inequalities are fine unless the question specifies.

Card 3182.4.2concept
Question

A linear function y = 3x − 1. Is it increasing, decreasing, or neither?

Answer

Increasing everywhere — gradient is 3 > 0, so the output always rises as x increases. No turning points.

Card 3192.4.2concept
Question

T(t) is increasing for 0 ≤ t ≤ 5 (hours). What does this mean in context?

Answer

The temperature rises during the first 5 hours.

Card 3202.4.2concept
Question

IB asks "Find the intervals during which the population is decreasing." What type of answer is needed?

Answer

An interval of t-values (the input variable), e.g. "3 < t < 8 hours." Not y-values. Use the same variable as the context.

Card 3212.4.2concept
Question

Profit increases from n = 0 to n = 200, then decreases. What is significant about n = 200?

Answer

n = 200 is where the profit function has its local maximum — the production level giving the greatest profit.

Card 3222.4.2concept
Question

IB asks "Describe the behaviour of f for large positive values of x." What kind of answer is needed?

Answer

State whether f is increasing or decreasing, and whether it approaches a fixed value (asymptote) or continues without bound. E.g. "f is decreasing and approaches y = 3."

Card 3232.4.3definition
Question

Define a horizontal asymptote.

Answer

A horizontal line y = k that the graph approaches as x → ∞ or x → −∞, but (usually) never reaches or crosses.

Card 3242.4.3concept
Question

Which function family always has a horizontal asymptote at y = 0 (if not vertically shifted)?

Answer

Exponential: y = a · bˣ. As x → −∞ (for b > 1) or x → ∞ (for 0 < b < 1), the output approaches 0.

Card 3252.4.3concept
Question

IB asks "Write down the equation of the horizontal asymptote." What is the required format?

Answer

Write it as a full equation: e.g. y = 3. Not just "3" — the y = must be included.

Card 3262.4.3concept
Question

In plain language, what does "approaching an asymptote" mean?

Answer

As x gets very large (or very negative), the output of f gets arbitrarily close to the asymptote value — but the curve never quite touches that line.

Card 3272.4.3concept
Question

State the horizontal asymptote of f(x) = 3 · 2ˣ + 5.

Answer

y = 5. As x → −∞, 3 · 2ˣ → 0, so f(x) → 5. The +5 shifts the asymptote up from y = 0 to y = 5.

Card 3282.4.3concept
Question

How does the horizontal asymptote affect the range of f(x) = 2 · 3ˣ + 4?

Answer

Range is f(x) > 4. The function always stays above y = 4 (never equals it), so 4 is excluded from the range.

Card 3292.4.3concept
Question

f(x) = 100 · 0.5ˣ + 10. What is the horizontal asymptote and what happens as x → ∞?

Answer

Horizontal asymptote y = 10. As x → ∞, 100 · 0.5ˣ → 0, so f(x) → 10 from above.

Card 3302.4.3concept
Question

What does a horizontal asymptote tell you about the range of the function?

Answer

The function never reaches the asymptote value, so that value is excluded from the range. E.g. if asymptote y = 3 and function approaches from above, range is f(x) > 3.

Card 3312.4.3definition
Question

What is a vertical asymptote?

Answer

A vertical line x = a where the function is undefined and its output grows to ±∞ as x approaches a from either side.

Card 3322.4.3concept
Question

Where does y = 1/(x − 3) have a vertical asymptote?

Answer

At x = 3 — the denominator is zero there, so the function is undefined. The graph blows up to ±∞ near x = 3.

Card 3332.4.3concept
Question

Common trap: a student confuses the asymptote y = 0 with an x-intercept. What is the difference?

Answer

x-intercept: the curve actually touches or crosses y = 0. Asymptote y = 0: the curve approaches y = 0 but never reaches it.

Card 3342.4.3concept
Question

f(x) = 5/(2x + 4). Find the vertical asymptote.

Answer

Set denominator = 0: 2x + 4 = 0 → x = −2. Vertical asymptote at x = −2.

Card 3352.4.3definition
Question

What does "end behaviour" mean for a function?

Answer

How f(x) behaves as x → ∞ or x → −∞ — whether it grows, falls, or approaches a limiting value (asymptote).

Card 3362.4.3concept
Question

f(x) = 2 · 0.5ˣ. Describe the end behaviour as x → ∞.

Answer

As x → ∞, 0.5ˣ → 0, so f(x) → 0. The graph approaches the asymptote y = 0 from above and decreases toward it.

Card 3372.4.3concept
Question

A function increases without bound as x → ∞. How do you express this?

Answer

f(x) → ∞ as x → ∞. There is no horizontal asymptote — the function grows forever.

Card 3382.4.3concept
Question

IB asks "Describe the behaviour of the function for large values of x." What should your answer include?

Answer

State whether f increases, decreases, or approaches a fixed value. If it approaches a value, give the equation of the asymptote. Use context language if relevant.

Card 3392.5.1definition
Question

What are the two key features that make a situation linear?

Answer

1. Constant rate of change — each unit increase in x produces the same change in y. 2. The graph is a straight line.

Card 3402.5.1concept
Question

When is a linear model the right choice?

Answer

When the data shows a constant rate of change — equal steps in x produce equal steps in y. A scatter plot that looks like a straight line suggests a linear model.

Card 3412.5.1concept
Question

C = 5n + 200 is a cost model. What does each part tell you?

Answer

5n: cost increases by 5 per unit produced (variable cost, the gradient). 200: fixed cost regardless of production level (the y-intercept).

Card 3422.5.1concept
Question

A car travels at a constant speed of 80 km/h. Is distance vs time a linear model? Why?

Answer

Yes — constant speed means equal distance in equal time intervals. Distance = 80t is linear with gradient 80.

Card 3432.5.1formula
Question

You have two data points. How do you build a linear model?

Answer

1. Calculate gradient: m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁). 2. Use y = mx + c with one point to find c. 3. Write the model.

Card 3442.5.1concept
Question

A model gives T = −2.5t + 80. Find T when t = 12.

Answer

T = −2.5(12) + 80 = −30 + 80 = 50.

Card 3452.5.1concept
Question

Temperature falls from 60°C to 20°C over 8 hours. Write a linear model for T in terms of t.

Answer

m = (20 − 60)/8 = −5. Using (0, 60): T = −5t + 60.

Card 3462.5.1concept
Question

IB asks "Write a linear model." What must your answer include?

Answer

The full equation in y = mx + c form, with numerical values for m and c, using the variables named in the context.

Card 3472.5.1concept
Question

P = 4.5t + 120 (P = population, t = years). Interpret the gradient 4.5.

Answer

The population increases by 4.5 people per year.

Card 3482.5.1concept
Question

W = 0.3d + 50 (weight W kg, distance d km). Interpret the y-intercept 50.

Answer

The initial weight is 50 kg — the weight at the start (d = 0), before any distance has been covered.

Card 3492.5.1concept
Question

IB asks "Interpret the gradient in context." How do you get full marks?

Answer

State: the numerical value, the units, and what it means for the specific context. E.g. "The water level rises by 3 cm per hour."

Card 3502.5.1concept
Question

A linear model has a negative gradient. What does this tell you?

Answer

The quantity is decreasing at a constant rate as the input variable increases.

Card 3512.5.1concept
Question

What does it mean for a linear model to be "valid"?

Answer

The model gives reliable, meaningful predictions for x-values within the range of the original data (interpolation). Outside this range, the model may break down.

Card 3522.5.1concept
Question

IB asks "Is the model valid for x = 50? Give a reason." How do you answer?

Answer

Check if x = 50 is within the data range. If yes: "Yes — x = 50 is within the data range so the estimate is reliable (interpolation)." If no: "Less reliable — x = 50 is outside the data range (extrapolation)."

Card 3532.5.1concept
Question

T = −2t + 100 predicts T = −100 at t = 100. Why is this problematic?

Answer

Physically extreme or impossible values signal model breakdown — this is extrapolation far beyond the data range. Real temperatures may not follow this pattern at t = 100.

Card 3542.5.1definition
Question

What is the key difference between interpolation and extrapolation?

Answer

Interpolation: predicting within the data range — generally reliable. Extrapolation: predicting outside the range — less reliable, the pattern may not continue.

Card 3552.5.2definition
Question

What graph shape does a quadratic model produce?

Answer

A parabola — a symmetric U-shape. Opens upward (∪) if a > 0, downward (∩) if a < 0.

Card 3562.5.2concept
Question

Give a real-world example of a quadratic model.

Answer

A ball thrown upward: h(t) = −5t² + 20t + 3. Height rises, reaches a maximum, then falls — the parabolic path of projectile motion.

Card 3572.5.2concept
Question

How does a quadratic model differ from a linear model?

Answer

Linear: constant rate of change, straight line. Quadratic: changing rate of change, has a maximum or minimum turning point (vertex), curved graph.

Card 3582.5.2concept
Question

R(p) = −2p² + 80p gives revenue R at price p. What does the downward parabola tell you?

Answer

Revenue increases, reaches a maximum at the vertex (optimal price), then decreases. There is one best price for maximum revenue.

Card 3592.5.2formula
Question

Formula: x-coordinate of the vertex of y = ax² + bx + c.

Answer

x = −b/(2a). The y-coordinate is found by substituting this x back into the equation.

Card 3602.5.2concept
Question

Find the vertex of y = 2x² − 8x + 3.

Answer

x = −(−8)/(2·2) = 2. y = 2(4) − 8(2) + 3 = 8 − 16 + 3 = −5. Vertex at (2, −5).

Card 3612.5.2concept
Question

IB asks "Find the minimum value of f(x) = x² − 6x + 11."

Answer

x = −(−6)/(2·1) = 3. f(3) = 9 − 18 + 11 = 2. Minimum value is 2 (at x = 3).

Card 3622.5.2concept
Question

How do you know whether the vertex is a maximum or a minimum?

Answer

If a > 0 (parabola opens up), the vertex is a minimum. If a < 0 (parabola opens down), the vertex is a maximum.

Card 3632.5.2concept
Question

IB asks for the "maximum value" of f(x) = −x² + 6x − 5. Student writes x = 3. What is wrong?

Answer

x = 3 is the x-coordinate of the vertex, not the maximum value. The maximum value is f(3) = −9 + 18 − 5 = 4.

Card 3642.5.2concept
Question

Student uses x = b/(2a) for the vertex (forgot the negative). What goes wrong?

Answer

The formula is x = −b/(2a). Forgetting the negative gives the wrong x-value and hence the wrong vertex.

Card 3652.5.2concept
Question

Can a quadratic with a > 0 have a maximum? Explain.

Answer

No — if a > 0 the parabola opens upward and only has a minimum. Only quadratics with a < 0 have a maximum.

Card 3662.5.2concept
Question

A context says "the ball is on the ground." What equation does this give for h(t) = −5t² + 20t?

Answer

h(t) = 0. Set −5t² + 20t = 0 → −5t(t − 4) = 0 → t = 0 or t = 4. Ball is on the ground at t = 0 and t = 4.

Card 3672.5.2concept
Question

h(t) = −5t² + 20t + 1. Find the maximum height.

Answer

t = −20/(2·−5) = 2. h(2) = −5(4) + 40 + 1 = 21. Maximum height = 21.

Card 3682.5.2concept
Question

P(n) = −n² + 10n − 16. Find the production level for maximum profit.

Answer

n = −10/(2·−1) = 5. Maximum profit at n = 5 units.

Card 3692.5.2concept
Question

IB gives a quadratic and asks "for what values of n is P positive?" How do you answer?

Answer

Find x-intercepts (set P = 0, solve). P is positive between the roots if a < 0, or outside them if a > 0.

Card 3702.5.2concept
Question

R = −3p² + 120p. What do the x-intercepts represent in the revenue context?

Answer

R = 0 at p = 0 and p = 40. These are the prices at which revenue is zero: free (no payment) or so expensive no one buys.

Card 3712.5.3formula
Question

Write the general exponential model and name each parameter.

Answer

y = a · bˣ. a = initial value (y-intercept at x = 0). b = growth/decay factor per unit of x.

Card 3722.5.3concept
Question

In y = 500 · 1.06ˣ, interpret 500 and 1.06.

Answer

500 = initial value (at x = 0). 1.06 = growth factor — 6% growth per unit of x.

Card 3732.5.3concept
Question

If b > 1 in y = a · bˣ, is it growth or decay?

Answer

Growth — the output increases as x increases. The greater b is above 1, the faster the growth.

Card 3742.5.3concept
Question

If 0 < b < 1 in y = a · bˣ, is it growth or decay?

Answer

Decay — the output decreases as x increases. The closer b is to 0, the faster the decay.

Card 3752.5.3concept
Question

Population starts at 4000 and grows by 5% per year. Write the model.

Answer

P(t) = 4000 · 1.05ᵗ. Initial value a = 4000, growth factor b = 1 + 0.05 = 1.05.

Card 3762.5.3concept
Question

A substance starts at 200 g and halves every year. Write the model.

Answer

Q(t) = 200 · 0.5ᵗ. Initial value a = 200, decay factor b = 0.5.

Card 3772.5.3formula
Question

IB gives two data points for y = a · bˣ. How do you find a and b?

Answer

Substitute both points to get two equations. Divide one by the other to eliminate a and solve for b. Then substitute b back to find a.

Card 3782.5.3concept
Question

P = 3000 · 1.04ᵗ. Find P when t = 5.

Answer

P = 3000 · 1.04⁵ = 3000 · 1.2167 ≈ 3650.

Card 3792.5.3concept
Question

A student writes y = 5 · 1.03 · x instead of y = 5 · 1.03ˣ. What is the mistake?

Answer

y = 5 · 1.03 · x is linear, not exponential. In an exponential model, x must be the exponent: y = 5 · 1.03ˣ.

Card 3802.5.3concept
Question

Growth rate is 8%. A student writes b = 8. What is the correct value of b?

Answer

b is the growth factor, not the rate. b = 1 + rate = 1 + 0.08 = 1.08. Using b = 8 would give wildly wrong values.

Card 3812.5.3concept
Question

Can an exponential model y = a · bˣ ever give a negative value (with a > 0, b > 0)?

Answer

No — a · bˣ is always positive when a > 0 and b > 0. A negative result always means a calculation error.

Card 3822.5.3concept
Question

IB gives a table of data. How do you check if an exponential model fits?

Answer

Check the ratio of successive y-values: if y₂/y₁ is approximately constant, the data is exponential.

Card 3832.5.3concept
Question

What is the horizontal asymptote of y = 3 · 2ˣ? Explain.

Answer

y = 0. As x → −∞, 2ˣ → 0, so the whole expression approaches 0 from above. The x-axis is the asymptote.

Card 3842.5.3concept
Question

P(t) = 1000 · 0.8ᵗ. What happens to P as t → ∞?

Answer

P → 0. The substance/quantity decays toward zero but never fully disappears (according to the model).

Card 3852.5.3concept
Question

IB asks "Write down the equation of the horizontal asymptote" for y = 500 · 1.1ˣ.

Answer

y = 0. Write as a full equation. The growth model approaches 0 as x → −∞.

Card 3862.5.3concept
Question

Why might an exponential decay model be unreliable for very large t?

Answer

The model predicts the quantity approaches zero but never reaches it. In reality, the quantity may reach zero (e.g. a substance fully decays). The model is a mathematical idealisation.

Card 3872.5.4formula
Question

Write the general form of a power model.

Answer

y = axⁿ, where a is a constant and n is any real-number power.

Card 3882.5.4concept
Question

Give two real-world examples of power models.

Answer

Area of circle: A = πr² (power 2). Distance under gravity: s = 5t² (power 2). Surface area ∝ length² for similar shapes.

Card 3892.5.4concept
Question

In y = axⁿ, what is the key structural difference from an exponential model y = a · bˣ?

Answer

Power model: x is the base, n is a fixed exponent. Exponential: x is the exponent, b is a fixed base. Very different shapes for large x.

Card 3902.5.4concept
Question

In y = 3x², what happens to y when x doubles?

Answer

y increases by a factor of 2² = 4. Power models scale multiplicatively: doubling x multiplies y by 2ⁿ.

Card 3912.5.4concept
Question

y = 2x³ vs y = 2 · 3ˣ. Which is a power model and which is exponential?

Answer

y = 2x³ is a power model — x is the base. y = 2 · 3ˣ is exponential — x is the exponent.

Card 3922.5.4concept
Question

For large x, which grows faster — a power model or an exponential (b > 1)?

Answer

Exponential always eventually grows faster than any power model. Even x¹⁰⁰ is eventually overtaken by 2ˣ.

Card 3932.5.4concept
Question

A power model y = axⁿ with n > 0 passes through the origin. Does an exponential model?

Answer

No — exponential y = a · bˣ passes through (0, a), not the origin (unless a = 0). A power model with n > 0 passes through (0, 0).

Card 3942.5.4concept
Question

IB asks you to identify whether a model is power or exponential. You see y = 4 · 0.7ˣ. What is it?

Answer

Exponential — x is in the exponent. Base 0.7 means decay. It is NOT a power model.

Card 3952.5.4formula
Question

Which GDC regression type do you use for a power model?

Answer

Power regression (PwrReg on TI-84). Returns a and b for y = axᵇ.

Card 3962.5.4concept
Question

GDC gives PwrReg: a = 3.2456, b = 0.8123. How do you write the model?

Answer

y = 3.25x^0.812 (all values to 3 s.f.).

Card 3972.5.4concept
Question

When should you choose power regression over linear regression?

Answer

When the scatter plot shows a curved relationship (not straight), the data passes near the origin, and a straight line clearly doesn't fit the pattern.

Card 3982.5.4concept
Question

Power regression gives R² = 0.97. What does this tell you?

Answer

Very strong fit — 97% of variation in y is explained by the power model. It is a very good fit for the data.

Card 3992.5.4concept
Question

y = 0.5d^2.1 gives mass M (kg) vs diameter d (cm). What does the power 2.1 tell you?

Answer

Mass grows slightly faster than the square of diameter. Doubling d multiplies M by 2^2.1 ≈ 4.3.

Card 4002.5.4concept
Question

IB asks "Explain why this model may not be reliable for large x." How do you answer?

Answer

The model was built from data in a limited range. Using it for x well beyond that range is extrapolation — the pattern may not continue and the model may give unrealistic values.

Card 4012.5.4concept
Question

y = 2x^1.5. Find y when x = 4.

Answer

y = 2 · 4^1.5 = 2 · 8 = 16.

Card 4022.5.4concept
Question

A power model gives a negative y for a quantity that must be positive. What does this indicate?

Answer

The model is not valid for that input. Negative length, mass, or similar quantities are physically impossible. Either the input is outside the valid domain or the model breaks down.

Card 4032.5.5formula
Question

Write the general sinusoidal model and name every parameter.

Answer

f(t) = a sin(bt + c) + d. a = amplitude (half the range). Period = 2π/b. c = phase shift. d = midline (vertical shift).

Card 4042.5.5concept
Question

What is the amplitude of f(t) = 3 sin(2t) + 5?

Answer

Amplitude = 3. It is the coefficient of sin — the distance from the midline to the maximum or minimum.

Card 4052.5.5formula
Question

What is the period of f(t) = sin(πt/6)?

Answer

Period = 2π ÷ (π/6) = 2π × 6/π = 12.

Card 4062.5.5concept
Question

In f(t) = 4 cos(2πt/12) + 10, what is the midline and what values does f oscillate between?

Answer

Midline y = 10. Amplitude = 4, so f oscillates between 10 − 4 = 6 and 10 + 4 = 14.

Card 4072.5.5formula
Question

How do you find amplitude and midline from the max and min values?

Answer

Amplitude = (max − min) / 2. Midline = (max + min) / 2.

Card 4082.5.5concept
Question

A model has maximum 18 and minimum 4. Find the amplitude and midline.

Answer

Amplitude = (18 − 4)/2 = 7. Midline = (18 + 4)/2 = 11.

Card 4092.5.5concept
Question

Temperature oscillates between 8°C and 24°C daily. State the midline and amplitude.

Answer

Midline = (8 + 24)/2 = 16°C. Amplitude = (24 − 8)/2 = 8°C.

Card 4102.5.5formula
Question

The period of a sinusoidal model is 24 hours. Find b in f(t) = a sin(bt) + d.

Answer

2π/b = 24 → b = 2π/24 = π/12.

Card 4112.5.5concept
Question

IB asks for amplitude. Student writes "the maximum is 18." What is wrong?

Answer

Amplitude = (max − min)/2, not the maximum value alone. If min = 4, amplitude = (18 − 4)/2 = 7, not 18.

Card 4122.5.5definition
Question

What is the difference between period and frequency?

Answer

Period: how long one complete cycle takes (in time units, e.g. hours). Frequency: cycles per unit time = 1/period.

Card 4132.5.5concept
Question

A student says the period is b (the coefficient inside sin). What is wrong?

Answer

b is not the period — it is a parameter inside the argument. Period = 2π/b. For b = 2, period = π, not 2.

Card 4142.5.5concept
Question

f(t) = 5 sin(...) + 12. Student says maximum = 12 (reading the midline as max). What is the actual maximum?

Answer

Maximum = midline + amplitude = 12 + 5 = 17. The midline d is not the maximum.

Card 4152.5.5concept
Question

f(t) = 7 sin(πt/12) + 15. Find f(6).

Answer

f(6) = 7 sin(π · 6/12) + 15 = 7 sin(π/2) + 15 = 7(1) + 15 = 22.

Card 4162.5.5concept
Question

Tide height: h(t) = 3 sin(πt/6) + 5. Find h(3).

Answer

h(3) = 3 sin(π/2) + 5 = 3(1) + 5 = 8 m.

Card 4172.5.5concept
Question

A model predicts a value greater than the maximum. What does this indicate?

Answer

Either a calculation error, or the model is being used outside its valid range. A sinusoidal model never exceeds amplitude + midline.

Card 4182.5.5concept
Question

T(t) = 8 sin(πt/12) + 12. Find the first time after t = 0 when T = 20.

Answer

8 sin(πt/12) + 12 = 20 → sin(πt/12) = 1 → πt/12 = π/2 → t = 6 hours.

Card 4192.6.1definition
Question

Name the five model types in IB AI SL and their general forms.

Answer

Linear: y = mx + c. Quadratic: y = ax² + bx + c. Exponential: y = a · bˣ. Power: y = axⁿ. Sinusoidal: y = a sin(bx + c) + d.

Card 4202.6.1concept
Question

Which model type is best for a quantity that grows proportionally to itself (e.g. bacteria doubling)?

Answer

Exponential — constant percentage growth = constant ratio between successive values = exponential model.

Card 4212.6.1concept
Question

Which model type produces a repeating (periodic) graph?

Answer

Sinusoidal (trigonometric). Tides, temperature cycles, sound waves — any periodic real-world quantity.

Card 4222.6.1concept
Question

A scatter plot shows a clear straight-line pattern. Which model should you choose?

Answer

Linear. A straight-line scatter plot is the defining sign of a linear model.

Card 4232.6.1concept
Question

Scatter plot curves upward and passes near the origin. Which two models should you consider?

Answer

Power (y = axⁿ) or exponential (y = a · bˣ). The near-origin hint favours power. Compare R² after fitting both.

Card 4242.6.1concept
Question

Scatter plot rises symmetrically then falls, forming a single peak. Which model fits?

Answer

Quadratic — single turning point, symmetric parabola shape.

Card 4252.6.1concept
Question

Scatter plot oscillates up and down repeatedly at regular intervals. Which model fits?

Answer

Sinusoidal — regular repeating pattern = periodic = trigonometric model.

Card 4262.6.1concept
Question

IB says "Suggest a suitable model and give a reason." How do you get full marks?

Answer

Name the model type AND give one clear reason based on the shape or context. E.g. "Exponential, because the data shows a constant ratio between successive values."

Card 4272.6.1concept
Question

Both power and exponential curves go upward. How do you tell them apart?

Answer

Power (y = axⁿ): may pass through origin, no horizontal asymptote to the right. Exponential (y = a · bˣ): never passes through origin, has horizontal asymptote y = 0 as x → −∞.

Card 4282.6.1concept
Question

Data: (1, 3), (2, 12), (3, 48). Check if the ratio between successive y-values is constant.

Answer

12/3 = 4 and 48/12 = 4. Constant ratio → exponential model.

Card 4292.6.1concept
Question

Power regression R² = 0.91; exponential regression R² = 0.98. Which do you choose?

Answer

Exponential — higher R² means it explains more of the variation. Choose the model with the higher R².

Card 4302.6.1concept
Question

IB asks "Explain why exponential is more appropriate than linear." How do you answer?

Answer

State that the data shows a constant multiplicative (percentage) growth rate, not a constant additive change — which matches exponential, not linear.

Card 4312.6.1concept
Question

Population doubles every 5 years. Which model is most appropriate?

Answer

Exponential — doubling at a constant time interval means a constant ratio between values, which is the defining feature of exponential models.

Card 4322.6.1concept
Question

A ball follows a single arc up and down. Which model?

Answer

Quadratic — the path is a parabola. It has one turning point and is not periodic (doesn't repeat).

Card 4332.6.1concept
Question

Electricity use follows the same pattern every 24 hours. Which model?

Answer

Sinusoidal — regular repeating cycle with constant period.

Card 4342.6.1concept
Question

Drag force is proportional to the square of speed. Which model?

Answer

Power model: F = av², where n = 2.

Card 4352.6.2formula
Question

What are the steps to perform linear regression on a TI-84 GDC?

Answer

1. Enter x data in L1, y data in L2. 2. Stat → Calc → LinReg(ax+b). 3. Note a and b from output. 4. Write the equation y = ax + b.

Card 4362.6.2concept
Question

What does the GDC regression output show you?

Answer

The best-fit equation parameters (a, b, etc.) and the correlation coefficient r (or R² for non-linear).

Card 4372.6.2concept
Question

IB asks "use the GDC to find the regression equation." What must you write?

Answer

The full equation with all parameters to 3 s.f. E.g. y = 2.35x + 4.18. Include what regression type you used if asked.

Card 4382.6.2concept
Question

After running regression, IB says "use your equation to predict y when x = 10." What do you do?

Answer

Substitute x = 10 into the regression equation and calculate. Show the substitution clearly.

Card 4392.6.2concept
Question

Data curves upward steeply. Which regression types should you try?

Answer

Exponential (ExpReg) and power (PwrReg). Run both and compare R² values.

Card 4402.6.2concept
Question

Data oscillates regularly. Which regression is appropriate?

Answer

Sinusoidal regression (SinReg on TI-84).

Card 4412.6.2concept
Question

You run LinReg (R² = 0.61) and ExpReg (R² = 0.95). What should you do?

Answer

Use the exponential model — much higher R² means far better fit.

Card 4422.6.2concept
Question

IB gives a data table showing a constant ratio between successive y-values. Which regression?

Answer

Exponential regression (ExpReg). Constant ratio is the hallmark of exponential growth/decay.

Card 4432.6.2concept
Question

GDC ExpReg output: a = 2.3456, b = 0.8123 (for y = a · bˣ). How do you write the answer?

Answer

y = 2.35 · 0.812ˣ (all values to 3 s.f.).

Card 4442.6.2concept
Question

IB asks "Write down the values of a and b." Do you need to show GDC working?

Answer

No — just state the values clearly. "From GDC: a = 2.35, b = 0.812." No algebraic working is needed.

Card 4452.6.2concept
Question

GDC gives LinReg: y = 3.7x − 12.4. Find the predicted y when x = 5.

Answer

y = 3.7(5) − 12.4 = 18.5 − 12.4 = 6.1.

Card 4462.6.2concept
Question

Why must regression coefficients be rounded to 3 s.f. in IB answers?

Answer

IB expects 3 significant figures unless specified. Using fewer can cause errors in later parts; IB may not award accuracy marks if rounding is too severe.

Card 4472.6.2concept
Question

What does r = 0.99 tell you about a linear regression?

Answer

Very strong positive linear correlation. The model fits the data extremely well.

Card 4482.6.2definition
Question

What is the difference between r and R²?

Answer

r: Pearson correlation coefficient, ranges from −1 to 1, linear regression only. R²: coefficient of determination, ranges 0 to 1, applies to all regression types. R² = r² for linear.

Card 4492.6.2concept
Question

IB asks "Comment on the reliability of the model." R² = 0.72. What do you write?

Answer

The model has a moderate fit (R² = 0.72 — 72% of variation is explained). Predictions may not be highly reliable.

Card 4502.6.2concept
Question

R² = 1 for a regression. What does this mean?

Answer

Perfect fit — every data point lies exactly on the regression curve. All predicted values match observed values exactly.

Card 4512.6.3definition
Question

Define interpolation.

Answer

Using a model to predict a value for an input that is within the range of the original data. Generally reliable.

Card 4522.6.3definition
Question

Define extrapolation.

Answer

Using a model to predict a value for an input that is outside the range of the original data. Less reliable — the pattern may not continue.

Card 4532.6.3concept
Question

Data collected 2010–2020. You predict the value in 2025. Is this interpolation or extrapolation?

Answer

Extrapolation — 2025 is beyond the end of the data range.

Card 4542.6.3concept
Question

Which is generally more reliable — interpolation or extrapolation? Why?

Answer

Interpolation — we stay within the range where the model was built and validated. Extrapolation assumes the pattern continues, which may not hold in new conditions.

Card 4552.6.3concept
Question

IB asks "Is your estimate reliable? Give a reason." The x-value is within the data range. How do you answer?

Answer

"Yes, the estimate is reliable as the value x = [n] is within the data range (interpolation)."

Card 4562.6.3concept
Question

IB asks "Is your estimate reliable?" The x-value is outside the data range. How do you answer?

Answer

"The estimate is less reliable as the value x = [n] is outside the data range (extrapolation). The model may not hold beyond the collected data."

Card 4572.6.3concept
Question

A linear model predicts a negative population for t = 100. What does this show?

Answer

The model breaks down for large t — populations cannot be negative. The model is only valid within the original data range.

Card 4582.6.3concept
Question

Why might predictions far into the future be unreliable even with a good model?

Answer

Conditions change over time (resources, policy, environment). The model was built on past data and assumes the same pattern continues indefinitely.

Card 4592.6.3definition
Question

What is the "valid domain" of a model?

Answer

The range of input values for which the model produces meaningful, realistic outputs — usually the range of the original data.

Card 4602.6.3concept
Question

h(t) = −5t² + 20t gives a ball's height. h(5) = −25. Why is this not valid?

Answer

Negative height is physically impossible — the ball has already hit the ground. The model is only valid for 0 ≤ t ≤ 4 (while airborne).

Card 4612.6.3concept
Question

How do you check whether a model output is "sensible"?

Answer

Ask: Is the output physically possible? Is the input within the data range? Does the result make sense in the context (correct units, realistic magnitude)?

Card 4622.6.3concept
Question

IB asks "State one limitation of this model." What kind of answer is expected?

Answer

One reason the model may not be perfectly accurate, e.g. "The model assumes constant growth rate, but this may not hold over long periods as conditions change."

Card 4632.6.3concept
Question

What is the IB-style format for answering "Is this estimate reliable?"

Answer

Yes/No + one reason referencing whether the input is within or outside the data range (interpolation vs extrapolation).

Card 4642.6.3concept
Question

Data collected for 0 ≤ t ≤ 10. You predict at t = 8. Write your reliability comment.

Answer

"The estimate is reliable as t = 8 is within the data range (interpolation)."

Card 4652.6.3concept
Question

Data collected for 0 ≤ t ≤ 10. You predict at t = 15. Write your reliability comment.

Answer

"The estimate is less reliable as t = 15 is outside the data range (extrapolation). The model may not hold beyond the collected data."

Card 4662.6.3concept
Question

IB asks "Suggest one reason why the model may not be appropriate." Give a strong example answer.

Answer

"The model assumes exponential growth continues indefinitely, but in reality growth may slow due to limited resources or carrying capacity."

Card 4672.7.1formula
Question

What does (f∘g)(x) mean?

Answer

f(g(x)): apply the inner function g first, then the outer function f.

Card 4682.7.1concept
Question

In f∘g, which function acts first?

Answer

g — the one written closest to x (read right-to-left).

Card 4692.7.1concept
Question

How do you build the formula for (f∘g)(x)?

Answer

Substitute the whole expression g(x) into f wherever f's input appears, then simplify.

Card 4702.7.1concept
Question

Is f∘g the same as g∘f?

Answer

Usually no — order matters, so they are generally different functions.

Card 4712.7.1concept
Question

f(x)=2x+1, g(x)=x−3. Find (f∘g)(5).

Answer

g(5)=2, then f(2)=2(2)+1=5.

Card 4722.7.1concept
Question

f(x)=x², g(x)=x+1. Find (f∘g)(x) and (g∘f)(x).

Answer

(f∘g)(x)=(x+1)²; (g∘f)(x)=x²+1. They differ.

Card 4732.7.1concept
Question

What two conditions give the domain of f(g(x))?

Answer

x must be allowed into g, AND g(x) must be a legal input for f.

Card 4742.7.1concept
Question

f(x)=√x, g(x)=x−4. Domain of (f∘g)(x)?

Answer

√(x−4) needs x−4 ≥ 0, so x ≥ 4.

Card 4752.7.2concept
Question

What does the inverse function f⁻¹ do?

Answer

It undoes f: if f maps a→b, then f⁻¹ maps b→a. So f⁻¹(f(x)) = x.

Card 4762.7.2concept
Question

How do you find f⁻¹ algebraically?

Answer

Write y = f(x), swap x and y, then solve for y.

Card 4772.7.2concept
Question

What does f⁻¹(b) mean numerically?

Answer

The input that gives output b — i.e. solve f(x) = b.

Card 4782.7.2concept
Question

Is f⁻¹ the same as 1/f?

Answer

No — f⁻¹ is the inverse function (reverses f); 1/f is the reciprocal.

Card 4792.7.2concept
Question

How are the graphs of f and f⁻¹ related?

Answer

f⁻¹ is the reflection of f in the line y = x; each (a,b) becomes (b,a).

Card 4802.7.2concept
Question

When does an inverse function exist?

Answer

Only when f is one-to-one (passes a horizontal line test); otherwise restrict the domain.

Card 4812.7.2concept
Question

How do domain and range change for the inverse?

Answer

They swap: the range of f becomes the domain of f⁻¹.

Card 4822.7.2concept
Question

Find f⁻¹ for f(x) = 4x + 3.

Answer

y = 4x+3 → x = 4y+3 → f⁻¹(x) = (x−3)/4.

Card 4832.8.1concept
Question

What does y = f(x) + b do to the graph?

Answer

Translates it UP by b (b outside f changes the height; negative b moves it down).

Card 4842.8.1concept
Question

What does y = f(x − a) do, and why the sign?

Answer

Translates RIGHT by a. The input must be a units larger to reproduce an old height, so features move to bigger x.

Card 4852.8.1concept
Question

What does y = p·f(x) do?

Answer

Vertical stretch by factor p (every height ×p). Points on the x-axis don't move.

Card 4862.8.1concept
Question

What does y = f(qx) do?

Answer

Horizontal stretch by factor 1/q (width scaled by the reciprocal). q > 1 squashes toward the y-axis.

Card 4872.8.1concept
Question

What does y = −f(x) do?

Answer

Reflects the graph in the x-axis (heights flip sign).

Card 4882.8.1concept
Question

What does y = f(−x) do?

Answer

Reflects the graph in the y-axis (left↔right).

Card 4892.8.1concept
Question

Under g(x) = p f(x − a) + b, where does a point (x, y) go?

Answer

To (x + a, p·y + b): inside shifts x, outside scales then shifts y.

Card 4902.8.1concept
Question

If f has horizontal asymptote y = 0, what is the asymptote of f(x) + 5?

Answer

y = 5 — the outside +5 lifts the whole graph, asymptote included.

Card 4912.9.1concept
Question

How do you choose which function family to model a scenario with?

Answer

Match the behaviour: steady change → linear; one peak → quadratic; constant multiplier each step → exponential; fast-then-levels-off at a ceiling → logistic; repeats/oscillates → sinusoidal; different rule on each interval → piecewise.

Card 4922.9.1concept
Question

What is the key sign that a model should be logistic rather than exponential?

Answer

It grows fast at first but LEVELS OFF at a finite ceiling (carrying capacity). A plain exponential never flattens.

Card 4932.9.1formula
Question

In y = L/(1 + C·e^{−kt}), what does L represent and how do you find it?

Answer

L is the carrying capacity (long-run ceiling): as t → ∞, e^{−kt} → 0 so y → L.

Card 4942.9.1formula
Question

In y = L/(1 + C·e^{−kt}), what is the initial value (t = 0)?

Answer

Put t = 0: e⁰ = 1, so y(0) = L/(1 + C).

Card 4952.9.1concept
Question

In N = k·e^{rt}, what do k and r mean?

Answer

k is the starting value (at t = 0); r is the continuous growth (r > 0) or decay (r < 0) rate.

Card 4962.9.1formula
Question

In a sinusoidal model a·sin(b(t − c)) + d, what is each parameter?

Answer

a = amplitude (half the swing), d = midline (average level), period = 2π/b, c = horizontal shift.

Card 4972.9.1concept
Question

How do you write a bulk-discount cost as a piecewise function?

Answer

One linear rule up to the threshold, then a second linear rule (fixed cost so far + new lower rate × extra units) beyond it.

Card 4982.9.1concept
Question

After fitting a model, what should you always do for the marks?

Answer

Interpret each parameter in context AND comment on validity (where the model is reliable vs where extrapolation is unsafe).

Card 4993.1.1formula
Question

What is the 2D distance formula between (x1,y1) and (x2,y2)?

Answer

d = sqrt((x2-x1)^2 + (y2-y1)^2)

💡 Hint

Subtract coordinates first, then square.

Card 5003.1.1definition
Question

What is the midpoint formula in 2D?

Answer

M = ((x1+x2)/2, (y1+y2)/2)

💡 Hint

Average x-coordinates and y-coordinates separately.

Card 5013.1.1concept
Question

When do we use the 3D distance formula?

Answer

When points have x, y, and z coordinates.

💡 Hint

Add the z-difference squared as well.

Card 5023.1.1comparison
Question

Common IB trap with distance questions?

Answer

Mixing up subtraction order before squaring and arithmetic slips.

💡 Hint

Squaring removes sign, but arithmetic still matters.

Card 5033.1.2formula
Question

3D distance formula?

Answer

d = √[(x₂−x₁)² + (y₂−y₁)² + (z₂−z₁)²] — the 2D formula plus a z-term.

Card 5043.1.2formula
Question

3D midpoint formula?

Answer

M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2, (z₁+z₂)/2) — average all three coordinates.

Card 5053.1.2concept
Question

What is a space diagonal?

Answer

The line from one corner of a cuboid to the opposite corner — found with the 3D distance formula.

Card 5063.1.2formula
Question

Distance from (0,0,0) to (2,3,6)?

Answer

√(4+9+36) = √49 = 7.

Card 5073.1.2concept
Question

Given the 3D midpoint M and one end A, find the other end B?

Answer

B = 2M − A (double the midpoint, subtract the known end), coordinate by coordinate.

Card 5083.1.2concept
Question

Most common 3D-distance error?

Answer

Adding the gaps before squaring: √(6+4+3) instead of √(36+16+9). Square each gap first.

Card 5093.1.3formula
Question

Volume of a prism formula?

Answer

Volume = cross-sectional area x length

💡 Hint

Use consistent units (e.g., cm^3).

Card 5103.1.3formula
Question

Volume of a cylinder formula?

Answer

V = pi r^2 h

💡 Hint

Radius must be squared, not diameter.

Card 5113.1.3comparison
Question

Surface area vs volume: key difference?

Answer

Surface area measures outside covering; volume measures inside space.

💡 Hint

Units: area in square units, volume in cubic units.

Card 5123.1.3example
Question

IB context cue for surface area?

Answer

Material needed to cover an object.

💡 Hint

Look for paint, wrapping, or tin-sheet contexts.

Card 5133.10.1concept
Question

What two pieces of information does a vector store?

Answer

A magnitude (size) and a direction. A scalar has size only (e.g. temperature, price).

Card 5143.10.1formula
Question

How do you find the magnitude of a vector?

Answer

Pythagoras on its components: |v| = √(v₁² + v₂²) in 2D, √(v₁² + v₂² + v₃²) in 3D.

Card 5153.10.1concept
Question

Magnitude of (6, 8)?

Answer

√(6² + 8²) = √100 = 10.

Card 5163.10.1concept
Question

How do you add or subtract two vectors?

Answer

Component by component: add (or subtract) the matching entries.

Card 5173.10.1concept
Question

What does scalar multiplication k·v do to a vector?

Answer

Multiplies every component by k — it stretches/shrinks the vector, and flips its direction if k is negative.

Card 5183.10.1formula
Question

How do you make a unit vector from v?

Answer

Divide v by its own magnitude: v̂ = v / |v|. It keeps the direction but has length 1.

Card 5193.10.1concept
Question

What is a position vector?

Answer

The arrow from the origin O to a point: the position vector of A is a = OA.

Card 5203.10.1formula
Question

What is AB in terms of the position vectors a and b?

Answer

AB = b − a ('finish minus start') — the displacement from A to B.

Card 5213.11.1concept
Question

What does the vector equation of a line r = a + λd mean?

Answer

a is the position vector of a point ON the line, d is the direction the line points, and λ is a number that slides you along it (λ = 0 gives a, λ = 1 gives a + d).

Card 5223.11.1concept
Question

In r = a + λd, which part is the direction and which is a point on the line?

Answer

d (the vector multiplied by λ) is the direction; a (the constant part) is a point on the line.

Card 5233.11.1formula
Question

How do you find the direction vector of a line through points A and B?

Answer

d = B − A (finish minus start). Any scalar multiple of it is also a valid direction.

Card 5243.11.1formula
Question

Write the vector equation of the line through points A and B.

Answer

r = A + λ(B − A) — start at A, walk in the direction B − A.

Card 5253.11.1concept
Question

How do you find an object's position at a given value of λ?

Answer

Substitute that number for λ and add component by component: r = a + λd.

Card 5263.11.1concept
Question

How do you test whether a point P lies on the line r = a + λd?

Answer

Set a + λd = P, solve ONE component for λ, then check the SAME λ works in every other component. One λ fits all → on the line; otherwise → off it.

Card 5273.11.1concept
Question

Does a vector line have only one possible equation?

Answer

No — different start points a (any point on the line) and any scalar multiple of d describe the same line.

Card 5283.11.1concept
Question

Where on the line is the midpoint of A and B, in terms of λ?

Answer

At λ = ½ in r = A + λ(B − A): a half-step of the direction from A.

Card 5293.12.1formula
Question

What is the position vector for constant-velocity motion?

Answer

r(t) = r₀ + t·v — the start position r₀ plus the velocity v added on t times.

Card 5303.12.1concept
Question

In r(t) = r₀ + t·v, how do you read off the velocity?

Answer

v is the vector multiplying t — the coefficient of t in each coordinate.

Card 5313.12.1formula
Question

How do you find speed from a velocity vector?

Answer

speed = |v| = √(vₓ² + v_y²) — the length of the velocity vector (one positive number).

Card 5323.12.1concept
Question

What's the difference between velocity and speed?

Answer

Velocity is a vector (direction + rate); speed is a single positive number, the magnitude of velocity.

Card 5333.12.1concept
Question

Find the speed if v = (6, −8).

Answer

√(6² + (−8)²) = √100 = 10.

Card 5343.12.1concept
Question

A particle has r(t) = (4 + 6t, 12 − 8t). Where is it at t = 2?

Answer

(4 + 12, 12 − 16) = (16, −4).

Card 5353.12.1concept
Question

For steady motion, how far has an object travelled after time t?

Answer

Distance = speed × t (the path is a straight line, direction constant).

Card 5363.12.1concept
Question

If a question asks 'how fast is it moving', what do you give?

Answer

The speed — a single positive number (the magnitude of the velocity vector), not a vector.

Card 5373.12.2concept
Question

What must be true for two objects to collide?

Answer

They must be at the SAME position at the SAME value of t — one t satisfies every coordinate of r_A(t) = r_B(t).

Card 5383.12.2concept
Question

Why isn't 'paths crossing' the same as a collision?

Answer

Two objects can pass through the same point at different times; a collision needs the same point at the same moment.

Card 5393.12.2concept
Question

How do you check for a collision?

Answer

Set r_A(t) = r_B(t), solve one coordinate for t, then CHECK that t in the other coordinate(s). If it fits all, they collide.

Card 5403.12.2formula
Question

How do you find the distance between two moving objects?

Answer

d(t) = |r_B(t) − r_A(t)| = √((Δx)² + (Δy)²), the length of the displacement between them.

Card 5413.12.2concept
Question

How do you find the closest approach?

Answer

Find the MINIMUM of d(t) — graph d(t) on the GDC and read the lowest point (x = time, y = least distance).

Card 5423.12.2concept
Question

Why can you minimise d(t)² instead of d(t)?

Answer

d(t) is least exactly where d(t)² is least (both positive, square root is increasing), and d² has no awkward square root.

Card 5433.12.2concept
Question

What does the minimum point of d(t) tell you?

Answer

Its x-coordinate is the time of closest approach; its y-coordinate is the least distance between the objects.

Card 5443.12.2concept
Question

After finding the least distance, what should you do in an AI HL answer?

Answer

Interpret in context — compare it to the required safety/separation distance and state whether the rule is met.

Card 5453.13.1formula
Question

How do you compute the scalar (dot) product of v and w?

Answer

Multiply matching components and add: v·w = v₁w₁ + v₂w₂ + v₃w₃. The result is a single number.

Card 5463.13.1concept
Question

Is the dot product a vector or a number?

Answer

A number (scalar) — that's why it's called the scalar product.

Card 5473.13.1formula
Question

What is the formula linking the dot product to the angle?

Answer

v·w = |v||w| cos θ, so cos θ = (v·w)/(|v||w|).

Card 5483.13.1concept
Question

How do you find the angle between two vectors?

Answer

θ = cos⁻¹[ (v·w)/(|v||w|) ] — dot product over the product of the magnitudes.

Card 5493.13.1concept
Question

What does a NEGATIVE dot product tell you about the angle?

Answer

The angle is obtuse (between 90° and 180°), because cos θ is negative.

Card 5503.13.1concept
Question

How do you test if two vectors are perpendicular?

Answer

They are perpendicular exactly when v·w = 0.

Card 5513.13.1concept
Question

Find (1, 2, −2)·(3, 0, 1).

Answer

(1)(3) + (2)(0) + (−2)(1) = 3 + 0 − 2 = 1.

Card 5523.13.1concept
Question

To find a triangle's angle at vertex A, which vectors do you dot?

Answer

AB and AC (both pointing OUT from A); then cos A = (AB·AC)/(|AB||AC|).

Card 5533.13.2concept
Question

What does the cross product v×w give?

Answer

A VECTOR perpendicular to both v and w (the dot product gives a scalar).

Card 5543.13.2formula
Question

Component formula for v×w?

Answer

v×w = (v₂w₃ − v₃w₂, v₃w₁ − v₁w₃, v₁w₂ − v₂w₁).

Card 5553.13.2formula
Question

What does |v×w| equal?

Answer

|v×w| = |v||w| sin θ = the area of the parallelogram with sides v and w.

Card 5563.13.2formula
Question

Area of triangle ABC using vectors?

Answer

½|AB×AC| — two sides from the same vertex, crossed, length halved.

Card 5573.13.2concept
Question

How can you check a cross product is right?

Answer

It must be perpendicular to both inputs: v·(v×w) = 0 and w·(v×w) = 0.

Card 5583.13.2concept
Question

Dot product vs cross product — what comes out?

Answer

Dot → a scalar (number); cross → a vector.

Card 5593.13.2concept
Question

Is the cross product commutative?

Answer

No — w×v = −(v×w) (opposite direction); and v×v = 0.

Card 5603.13.2concept
Question

When is |v×w| = 0?

Answer

When v and w are parallel (sin θ = 0) — they span no area.

Card 5613.14.1concept
Question

What are the two basic parts of a graph?

Answer

Vertices (the dots/points) and edges (the lines joining pairs of vertices).

Card 5623.14.1concept
Question

What is the degree of a vertex?

Answer

The number of edge-ends meeting at that vertex (a loop counts as 2).

Card 5633.14.1formula
Question

State the handshake lemma.

Answer

The sum of all vertex degrees equals 2 × (number of edges): Σ deg(v) = 2E.

Card 5643.14.1concept
Question

Why must the number of odd-degree vertices be even?

Answer

Because the total degree Σ deg = 2E is always even, the odd degrees must pair up to keep the sum even.

Card 5653.14.1formula
Question

What is a complete graph Kₙ, and how many edges does it have?

Answer

Every pair of vertices is joined; it has n(n − 1)/2 edges and every vertex has degree n − 1.

Card 5663.14.1formula
Question

What is a tree, and how many edges does a tree on n vertices have?

Answer

A connected graph with no cycles; it has exactly n − 1 edges.

Card 5673.14.1concept
Question

What is a bipartite graph?

Answer

The vertices split into two groups, with edges only between the groups (never within a group).

Card 5683.14.1concept
Question

Distinguish a trail, a path and a cycle.

Answer

Trail = no repeated edge (may revisit a vertex); path = no repeated vertex; cycle = a path that returns to its start.

Card 5693.15.1concept
Question

What is an adjacency matrix?

Answer

A square matrix where rows and columns are the vertices (same order); entry (i,j) = the number of edges from vertex i to vertex j.

Card 5703.15.1concept
Question

How can you tell an undirected adjacency matrix from a directed one?

Answer

An undirected graph gives a SYMMETRIC matrix (edges go both ways); a directed graph is usually not symmetric.

Card 5713.15.1formula
Question

What does the (i,j) entry of Aⁿ tell you?

Answer

The number of walks of length n (n edges, repeats allowed) from vertex i to vertex j.

Card 5723.15.1concept
Question

Does 'length of a walk' mean distance?

Answer

No — length = the number of EDGES used. Use the weighted/distance matrix for actual distance.

Card 5733.15.1concept
Question

Where do you read 'closed walks' (return to start) in Aⁿ?

Answer

On the DIAGONAL — entry (i,i) of Aⁿ counts walks of length n that start and end at vertex i.

Card 5743.15.1concept
Question

How do you build a distance (weighted) matrix?

Answer

Replace each 1 in the adjacency matrix with the weight (distance/cost/time) of that edge; keep 0 (or blank/∞) where there is no edge.

Card 5753.15.1concept
Question

How do you count length-4 routes from X to Y on a GDC?

Answer

Enter A, compute A⁴, then read the entry in row X, column Y.

Card 5763.15.1concept
Question

For an undirected graph, what does the (i,i) entry of A² equal?

Answer

The degree of vertex i (the number of edges meeting it) — 'out and straight back'.

Card 5773.16.1concept
Question

What is a minimum spanning tree (MST)?

Answer

The set of edges connecting every vertex with the least total weight and no cycle. On n vertices it has exactly n − 1 edges.

Card 5783.16.1formula
Question

How many edges does a spanning tree on n vertices have?

Answer

Exactly n − 1, and it contains no cycle.

Card 5793.16.1concept
Question

State Kruskal's algorithm.

Answer

Sort all edges from cheapest to dearest; add them one at a time, skipping any edge that would create a cycle, until all vertices are connected.

Card 5803.16.1concept
Question

State Prim's algorithm.

Answer

Start at any vertex; repeatedly add the cheapest edge that joins a new (un-included) vertex to the tree, until all vertices are included.

Card 5813.16.1concept
Question

Do Prim's and Kruskal's give the same answer?

Answer

They always give the same total weight (and the same tree when all edge weights are distinct).

Card 5823.16.1concept
Question

What does Dijkstra's algorithm find?

Answer

The shortest path (least total weight) from a start vertex to a target vertex — not the whole connecting tree.

Card 5833.16.1concept
Question

In Dijkstra's, how is a vertex's label updated?

Answer

new label = min(old label, permanent value of current vertex + edge to this vertex). The smallest temporary label becomes permanent next.

Card 5843.16.1concept
Question

MST vs Dijkstra — when do you use each?

Answer

MST (Prim/Kruskal): connect ALL vertices cheaply. Dijkstra: shortest route between TWO specific vertices.

Card 5853.16.2concept
Question

What does the Chinese postman (route inspection) problem find?

Answer

The shortest CLOSED walk that uses every EDGE at least once and returns to the start.

Card 5863.16.2concept
Question

When can the postman traverse every edge exactly once?

Answer

When every vertex has even degree (an Eulerian circuit exists); then the answer is just the sum of all edges.

Card 5873.16.2concept
Question

Route-inspection method with odd vertices?

Answer

Pair the odd-degree vertices so the total of the shortest paths between the pairs is least; add that to the sum of all edges.

Card 5883.16.2formula
Question

CPP length formula?

Answer

Sum of all edges + minimum pairing of the odd-degree vertices' shortest paths.

Card 5893.16.2concept
Question

What does the travelling salesman problem (TSP) find?

Answer

The shortest CLOSED route visiting every VERTEX exactly once and returning to the start (a Hamiltonian cycle).

Card 5903.16.2concept
Question

How do you get an upper bound for the TSP?

Answer

Nearest-neighbour algorithm: from the start, always go to the nearest unvisited vertex, then return to start. Its length is an upper bound.

Card 5913.16.2concept
Question

How do you get a lower bound for the TSP (deleted-vertex method)?

Answer

Delete a vertex; find the MST of the rest; add the two cheapest edges from the deleted vertex back.

Card 5923.16.2concept
Question

Edge problem or vertex problem?

Answer

Route inspection covers every EDGE; travelling salesman visits every VERTEX. Pick by what must be covered.

Card 5933.2.1definition
Question

State SOH-CAH-TOA.

Answer

sin = opp/hyp, cos = adj/hyp, tan = opp/adj

💡 Hint

Works in right-angled triangles only.

Card 5943.2.1process
Question

When should you use inverse trig?

Answer

When angle is unknown and side ratio is known.

💡 Hint

Use sin^-1, cos^-1, tan^-1 on GDC.

Card 5953.2.1definition
Question

Which side is opposite theta?

Answer

The side directly across from angle theta.

💡 Hint

Mark theta clearly before choosing ratio.

Card 5963.2.1comparison
Question

Common trig mistake in IB Paper 1?

Answer

Using wrong ratio due to side mislabelling.

💡 Hint

Label opposite, adjacent, hypotenuse first.

Card 5973.2.2concept
Question

When is sine rule typically used?

Answer

When you have AAS, ASA, or SSA triangle data.

💡 Hint

Match side-angle opposite pairs.

Card 5983.2.2concept
Question

When is cosine rule typically used?

Answer

When you have SAS or SSS triangle data.

💡 Hint

Great for finding unknown side first.

Card 5993.2.2formula
Question

Cosine rule for side a?

Answer

a^2 = b^2 + c^2 - 2bc cos A

💡 Hint

Angle A is opposite side a.

Card 6003.2.2concept
Question

Ambiguous case in sine rule means?

Answer

SSA data can produce two possible triangles.

💡 Hint

Check if 0, 1, or 2 triangles fit.

Card 6013.3.1definition
Question

Angle of elevation definition?

Answer

Angle measured upward from horizontal line of sight.

💡 Hint

Draw horizontal first, then angle up.

Card 6023.3.1definition
Question

Angle of depression definition?

Answer

Angle measured downward from horizontal line of sight.

💡 Hint

Horizontal is at observer level.

Card 6033.3.1concept
Question

Why are elevation and depression linked?

Answer

They often form alternate interior angles in parallel-line setup.

💡 Hint

Use geometry before trig if needed.

Card 6043.3.1comparison
Question

IB exam pitfall in elevation questions?

Answer

Using vertical line as reference instead of horizontal.

💡 Hint

Reference line must be horizontal.

Card 6053.3.2process
Question

First step in 3D trig problems?

Answer

Sketch and isolate a right triangle in 3D shape.

💡 Hint

Convert 3D to connected 2D triangles.

Card 6063.3.2process
Question

How to find space diagonal of cuboid?

Answer

Use Pythagoras twice or 3D distance formula.

💡 Hint

d = sqrt(l^2 + w^2 + h^2).

Card 6073.3.2concept
Question

Why are bearings often paired with 3D trig?

Answer

Need plan view + elevation view for full geometry.

💡 Hint

Handle horizontal distance first.

Card 6083.3.2comparison
Question

Common error in 3D trig IB questions?

Answer

Using wrong triangle for angle asked.

💡 Hint

Identify which plane contains the angle.

Card 6093.4.1formula
Question

Arc length formula with theta in radians?

Answer

s = r theta

💡 Hint

Radians version is direct and fastest.

Card 6103.4.1formula
Question

Arc length formula with theta in degrees?

Answer

s = (theta/360) * 2pi r

💡 Hint

Convert carefully from part of full circle.

Card 6113.4.1concept
Question

Why radians are preferred in IB?

Answer

Many formulas become simpler and less error-prone.

💡 Hint

Especially for arc and sector formulae.

Card 6123.4.1example
Question

Arc length contextual cue?

Answer

Distance traveled along circular path, not straight line.

💡 Hint

Arc is curved perimeter part.

Card 6133.4.2formula
Question

Sector area formula in radians?

Answer

A = (1/2) r^2 theta

💡 Hint

Theta must be in radians.

Card 6143.4.2formula
Question

Sector area formula in degrees?

Answer

A = (theta/360) * pi r^2

💡 Hint

Same fraction idea as arc length.

Card 6153.4.2formula
Question

Perimeter of sector formula?

Answer

P = 2r + arc length

💡 Hint

Add both radii and curved edge.

Card 6163.4.2comparison
Question

IB trap for sector area tasks?

Answer

Using degrees formula with radians (or vice versa).

💡 Hint

Check angle mode before substituting.

Card 6173.5.1process
Question

How to find intersection of two lines algebraically?

Answer

Set equations equal (or solve simultaneous equations).

💡 Hint

Substitution or elimination both valid.

Card 6183.5.1definition
Question

What indicates parallel lines in y=mx+c form?

Answer

Same gradient m, different intercept c.

💡 Hint

Parallel lines do not meet.

Card 6193.5.1definition
Question

What indicates coincident lines?

Answer

Same gradient and same intercept.

💡 Hint

Infinitely many intersection points.

Card 6203.5.1example
Question

IB context for line intersection?

Answer

Break-even point or equal-cost point in models.

💡 Hint

Interpret x and y in context.

Card 6213.5.2definition
Question

Define perpendicular bisector of segment AB.

Answer

Line through midpoint of AB and perpendicular to AB.

💡 Hint

Points on it are equidistant from A and B.

Card 6223.5.2formula
Question

Perpendicular gradient rule?

Answer

If gradient is m, perpendicular gradient is -1/m.

💡 Hint

Except horizontal/vertical special case.

Card 6233.5.2concept
Question

Why is midpoint essential in bisector equation?

Answer

Bisector must pass through midpoint of original segment.

💡 Hint

Use midpoint as anchor point in line equation.

Card 6243.5.2concept
Question

Link between bisectors and Voronoi edges?

Answer

Voronoi boundaries are perpendicular bisectors between sites.

💡 Hint

This connects 3.5.2 to 3.6.

Card 6253.6.1definition
Question

Voronoi cell definition?

Answer

Set of points closer to one site than any other site.

💡 Hint

Nearest-site region.

Card 6263.6.1process
Question

How are Voronoi boundaries constructed?

Answer

Using perpendicular bisectors of neighbouring sites.

💡 Hint

Edges are bisector segments.

Card 6273.6.1definition
Question

What is a Voronoi vertex?

Answer

Point equidistant from 3 or more sites.

💡 Hint

Intersection of boundaries.

Card 6283.6.1process
Question

How to decide point membership in Voronoi cells?

Answer

Compare distances from the point to each site.

💡 Hint

Smallest distance wins.

Card 6293.6.2concept
Question

What changes when adding a new Voronoi site?

Answer

Only local neighbouring cells around insertion region change.

💡 Hint

Not every cell is redrawn.

Card 6303.6.2concept
Question

Largest empty circle center in Voronoi context?

Answer

Usually at a Voronoi vertex.

💡 Hint

It maximizes minimum distance to sites.

Card 6313.6.2example
Question

Real-world use of Voronoi diagrams?

Answer

Service zones (hospitals, towers, warehouses).

💡 Hint

Each zone served by nearest facility.

Card 6323.6.2process
Question

IB exam instruction for Voronoi updates?

Answer

State which zones change and justify using nearest-distance logic.

💡 Hint

Show geometric reasoning, not only drawing.

Card 6333.7.1concept
Question

What is one radian?

Answer

The angle at the centre of a circle subtended by an arc equal in length to the radius (≈ 57.3°).

Card 6343.7.1formula
Question

Convert degrees to radians.

Answer

Multiply by π/180 (since π rad = 180°).

Card 6353.7.1formula
Question

Convert radians to degrees.

Answer

Multiply by 180/π.

Card 6363.7.1formula
Question

How many radians in a full turn?

Answer

2π radians = 360° (and π radians = 180°).

Card 6373.7.1formula
Question

Arc-length formula?

Answer

l = rθ, with θ in radians.

Card 6383.7.1formula
Question

Sector-area formula?

Answer

A = ½r²θ, with θ in radians.

Card 6393.7.1concept
Question

Express 60° in radians.

Answer

60 × π/180 = π/3 radians.

Card 6403.7.1concept
Question

Why must θ be in radians for l = rθ and A = ½r²θ?

Answer

The formulas come from the fraction θ/(2π) of the circle; the 2π only cancels cleanly when θ is measured in radians.

Card 6413.8.1concept
Question

On the unit circle, what are the coordinates of the point at angle θ?

Answer

(cos θ, sin θ) — cos is the x-coordinate (across), sin is the y-coordinate (up).

Card 6423.8.1concept
Question

Why are sin θ and cos θ always between −1 and 1?

Answer

They're coordinates of a point on a circle of radius 1, so neither can exceed the radius.

Card 6433.8.1formula
Question

State the Pythagorean identity.

Answer

sin²θ + cos²θ = 1 (it's Pythagoras applied to the unit-circle point).

Card 6443.8.1formula
Question

Exact value of cos 60° and sin 60°?

Answer

cos 60° = ½, sin 60° = √3⁄2.

Card 6453.8.1formula
Question

Exact value of sin 45° and cos 45°?

Answer

Both equal √2⁄2 (≈ 0.707).

Card 6463.8.1formula
Question

How do you express tan θ using sin and cos?

Answer

tan θ = sin θ / cos θ.

Card 6473.8.1concept
Question

Given cos θ = 0.6 and θ acute, find sin θ.

Answer

sin²θ = 1 − 0.36 = 0.64, so sin θ = 0.8 (positive in Quadrant 1).

Card 6483.8.1concept
Question

How do you solve a trig equation over a given interval on the GDC?

Answer

Graph both sides over the interval, use 'intersect' to read EVERY crossing, then keep only solutions inside the interval.

Card 6493.9.1concept
Question

How do you find the image of a point under a 2×2 matrix?

Answer

Write the point as a column vector and multiply: matrix on the left, point on the right. (a b; c d)(x; y) = (ax+by; cx+dy).

Card 6503.9.1formula
Question

What is the rotation matrix (anticlockwise about O by θ)?

Answer

(cos θ −sin θ; sin θ cos θ).

Card 6513.9.1formula
Question

What is the enlargement matrix, scale factor k, about O?

Answer

(k 0; 0 k) — multiplies every distance from O by k.

Card 6523.9.1formula
Question

What is the reflection matrix in the line y = (tan θ)x?

Answer

(cos 2θ sin 2θ; sin 2θ −cos 2θ).

Card 6533.9.1concept
Question

Image of (4, 0) under a 90° anticlockwise rotation?

Answer

(0 −1; 1 0)(4; 0) = (0, 4).

Card 6543.9.1concept
Question

Which transformation does (−1 0; 0 −1) represent?

Answer

A rotation of 180° about the origin: (x, y) → (−x, −y).

Card 6553.9.1concept
Question

How do you transform a whole shape by a matrix?

Answer

Transform each vertex (multiply each corner's column vector), then re-join the images.

Card 6563.9.1concept
Question

Which transformation does (1 0; 0 −1) represent?

Answer

A reflection in the x-axis (it flips the sign of y only).

Card 6573.9.2concept
Question

How do you find one matrix for 'do A then B'?

Answer

Multiply BA (B on the left): image = B(Ax) = (BA)x. The right-most matrix acts first.

Card 6583.9.2concept
Question

Does the order of composition matter?

Answer

Yes — matrix multiplication is not commutative, so BA ≠ AB in general (different transformations).

Card 6593.9.2formula
Question

What is the determinant of (a b; c d)?

Answer

ad − bc.

Card 6603.9.2formula
Question

How does a matrix change area?

Answer

New area = |det| × old area; |det| is the area scale factor.

Card 6613.9.2concept
Question

What does a negative determinant tell you?

Answer

The transformation reverses orientation — the shape is reflected (flipped over).

Card 6623.9.2concept
Question

What does det = 0 mean for a transformation?

Answer

Area scale factor 0: the plane collapses onto a line/point, so there is no inverse (it can't be undone).

Card 6633.9.2concept
Question

A shape of area 6 is transformed by a matrix with det −4. New area?

Answer

|−4| × 6 = 24 (and the shape is flipped).

Card 6643.9.2formula
Question

What is det(BA) in terms of det A and det B?

Answer

det(BA) = det B × det A.

Card 6654.12.1concept
Question

What is the difference between a population and a sample?

Answer

The population is every individual of interest; the sample is the subset you actually collect data from. A good sample mirrors the population.

Card 6664.12.1concept
Question

Define simple random sampling.

Answer

Every member of the population has an equal chance of selection (e.g. names drawn from a hat, or GDC random numbers).

Card 6674.12.1concept
Question

Define systematic sampling.

Answer

Order the population, choose a random start, then pick every kᵗʰ member down the list.

Card 6684.12.1formula
Question

How do you find a stratified sample count for one group?

Answer

(group size ÷ population size) × sample size. Each stratum is sampled in proportion to its size.

Card 6694.12.1concept
Question

How do quota and stratified sampling differ?

Answer

Both target groups in proportion, but stratified picks members randomly within each group, while quota lets the interviewer choose — so quota is non-random and can be biased.

Card 6704.12.1concept
Question

Why is convenience sampling risky?

Answer

It surveys whoever is easiest to reach, so the sample is usually unrepresentative — it tends to over- or under-represent certain people, giving biased estimates.

Card 6714.12.1concept
Question

What does reliability mean for a test or measure?

Answer

Consistency — repeating the measurement gives (almost) the same result each time (small random error).

Card 6724.12.1concept
Question

What does validity mean for a test or measure?

Answer

It measures what it is supposed to measure, with no systematic bias. A measure can be reliable yet still invalid (consistently wrong).

Card 6734.13.1concept
Question

How do you choose which non-linear model to fit?

Answer

Look at the SHAPE of the scatter and pick the family that matches (exponential = constant % change, power = scaling/flattening, quadratic = rise-then-fall, sinusoidal = repeating). Then compare R² between candidates.

Card 6744.13.1concept
Question

What does the coefficient of determination R² tell you?

Answer

How much of the variation in the data the model explains. R² = 1 is a perfect fit; closer to 1 is better; near 0 is poor.

Card 6754.13.1concept
Question

How do you decide which of two models fits better?

Answer

Fit both on the GDC and compare R² — the model with the higher R² (closer to 1) fits better. Also check the shape and context make sense.

Card 6764.13.1formula
Question

What is a residual, and what is SSres?

Answer

A residual is data − model (y − ŷ) for one point. SSres = Σ(y − ŷ)² is the sum of squared residuals; regression minimises it, and a smaller SSres gives a higher R².

Card 6774.13.1concept
Question

Why square the residuals instead of just adding them?

Answer

So positive and negative residuals don't cancel out, and larger misses are penalised more heavily.

Card 6784.13.1formula
Question

Forms of the exponential model on the GDC?

Answer

y = k·aˣ (base form) or y = k·eʳˣ (natural form). a > 1 (or r > 0) = growth; 0 < a < 1 (or r < 0) = decay.

Card 6794.13.1concept
Question

What is the difference between interpolation and extrapolation?

Answer

Interpolation = predicting inside the data range (safer). Extrapolation = predicting outside it (riskier — the model may not hold).

Card 6804.13.1concept
Question

Does a high R² guarantee a prediction far outside the data is reliable?

Answer

No — R² only measures fit to the EXISTING data. Predictions far beyond the range (extrapolation) can be unreliable even when R² is near 1.

Card 6814.14.1formula
Question

How do you find E(X) for a discrete RV?

Answer

Multiply each value by its probability and add them: E(X) = Σ x·P(X = x). It's the long-run average.

Card 6824.14.1formula
Question

Formula for Var(X) of a discrete RV?

Answer

Var(X) = E(X²) − [E(X)]² — the mean of the squares minus the square of the mean. SD = √Var(X).

Card 6834.14.1concept
Question

Does E(X) have to be a value X can take?

Answer

No — e.g. the expected number of heads in one flip is 0.5, even though you only ever see 0 or 1.

Card 6844.14.1formula
Question

What is E(aX + b)?

Answer

aE(X) + b — the scale multiplies and the shift b is added on.

Card 6854.14.1formula
Question

What is Var(aX + b)?

Answer

a²Var(X). The shift b drops out completely; the scale a enters SQUARED.

Card 6864.14.1formula
Question

What is SD(aX + b)?

Answer

|a|·SD(X). The standard deviation multiplies by |a| and is unaffected by the shift b.

Card 6874.14.1concept
Question

Why does +b vanish from the variance?

Answer

Adding a constant slides every value equally, so the gaps between values (the spread) are unchanged.

Card 6884.14.1concept
Question

On a GDC, how do you get E(X) and SD from a probability table?

Answer

Enter values in L1 and probabilities in L2, run 1-Var Stats with L1 as data and L2 as frequencies: x̄ = E(X), σ = SD.

Card 6894.14.2formula
Question

For independent X and Y, what is E(X + Y) and E(X − Y)?

Answer

E(X + Y) = E(X) + E(Y); E(X − Y) = E(X) − E(Y). Means take the sign.

Card 6904.14.2formula
Question

For independent X and Y, what is Var(X ± Y)?

Answer

Var(X + Y) = Var(X − Y) = Var(X) + Var(Y). Variances ALWAYS add, even for a difference.

Card 6914.14.2concept
Question

Can you add standard deviations to combine spreads?

Answer

No — add the VARIANCES (square the SDs), then square-root: SD(X±Y) = √(SD(X)² + SD(Y)²).

Card 6924.14.2formula
Question

Sum of n independent copies of X (mean μ, variance σ²): mean and variance?

Answer

Mean = nμ; Variance = nσ² (so SD = σ√n).

Card 6934.14.2concept
Question

Difference between Var(nX) and Var(X₁+…+Xₙ)?

Answer

Var(nX) = n²σ² (one copy scaled up); Var(sum of n independent copies) = nσ² (separate items partly cancel).

Card 6944.14.2concept
Question

What is the unbiased estimate of the population mean?

Answer

The sample mean x̄ — it's unbiased as is.

Card 6954.14.2formula
Question

What is the unbiased estimate of the population variance?

Answer

sₙ₋₁² = Σ(x − x̄)²/(n − 1) — divide by n − 1, the GDC's Sx² (not σx² which uses ÷n).

Card 6964.14.2formula
Question

Relationship between sₙ₋₁² and the biased sₙ²?

Answer

sₙ₋₁² = [n/(n − 1)]·sₙ² — scale the biased variance up by n/(n − 1).

Card 6974.15.1concept
Question

What does the Central Limit Theorem say about the sample mean X̄?

Answer

For a large sample size n, X̄ is approximately Normal — even if the population itself is not Normal.

Card 6984.15.1formula
Question

What is the mean of the sample mean X̄?

Answer

It equals the population mean μ (averaging does not shift the centre).

Card 6994.15.1formula
Question

What is the standard deviation of the sample mean (the standard error)?

Answer

σ/√n — the population standard deviation divided by the square root of the sample size.

Card 7004.15.1formula
Question

As a formula, what is the approximate distribution of X̄ for large n?

Answer

X̄ ≈ N(μ, σ²/n), i.e. Normal with mean μ and standard error σ/√n.

Card 7014.15.1concept
Question

Why does the standard error shrink as n grows?

Answer

Averaging cancels out highs and lows; dividing σ by √n means larger samples give steadier (less variable) means.

Card 7024.15.1concept
Question

To halve the standard error, how much more data do you need?

Answer

Four times as much — because √n must double, and √4 = 2.

Card 7034.15.1concept
Question

When is X̄ EXACTLY Normal for any n?

Answer

When the population is already Normal — then no large-sample approximation is needed.

Card 7044.15.1concept
Question

Single value vs sample mean — which standard deviation do you use?

Answer

A single value uses σ; the mean (or total) of n values uses the standard error σ/√n.

Card 7054.16.1concept
Question

What is a confidence interval for a mean?

Answer

A range of believable values for the true population mean, built as x̄ ± margin of error. A 95% interval is produced by a method that captures the true mean about 95% of the time.

Card 7064.16.1formula
Question

Write the formula for a confidence interval for a mean.

Answer

x̄ ± t*·s_{n-1}/√n, where t* comes from the t-distribution with df = n − 1.

Card 7074.16.1formula
Question

How many degrees of freedom does a CI for a single mean use?

Answer

df = n − 1 (one less than the sample size). The GDC's t-interval applies this automatically.

Card 7084.16.1concept
Question

Which standard deviation goes in the CI formula, and why?

Answer

The unbiased estimate s_{n-1} (the GDC's 'Sx', dividing by n − 1), because the true population σ is unknown and must be estimated from the sample.

Card 7094.16.1concept
Question

On a GDC, how do you build a CI for a mean?

Answer

Use the t-interval menu: enter x̄, s_{n-1} and n (or the raw data) and the confidence level (C-Level), then read off the interval (a, b).

Card 7104.16.1concept
Question

How does increasing the sample size affect the interval?

Answer

It makes the interval NARROWER: a larger n increases √n in the denominator, so the margin t*·s/√n shrinks — a more precise estimate.

Card 7114.16.1concept
Question

How does raising the confidence level affect the interval?

Answer

It makes the interval WIDER: a higher confidence level uses a larger t*, so the margin grows — you cast a wider net to be more sure of trapping μ.

Card 7124.16.1concept
Question

How do you use a CI to test a claimed value of the mean?

Answer

If the claimed value lies INSIDE the interval it is plausible (consistent with the data); if it lies OUTSIDE, the data give evidence against the claim.

Card 7134.17.1formula
Question

State the Poisson probability formula.

Answer

For X ~ Po(m): P(X = x) = e^(−m)·mˣ/x!, for x = 0, 1, 2, …

Card 7144.17.1concept
Question

What does the parameter m represent in Po(m)?

Answer

The mean (average) number of events in the fixed interval.

Card 7154.17.1formula
Question

For a Poisson distribution, how do the mean and variance compare?

Answer

They are EQUAL: mean = variance = m, so σ = √m.

Card 7164.17.1concept
Question

Which GDC function gives P(X = x) for a Poisson?

Answer

poissonpdf(m, x) — the probability of exactly x events.

Card 7174.17.1concept
Question

Which GDC function gives P(X ≤ x) for a Poisson?

Answer

poissoncdf(m, x) — the probability of at most x events.

Card 7184.17.1concept
Question

How do you find P(X ≥ k) for a Poisson on the GDC?

Answer

Use the complement: P(X ≥ k) = 1 − poissoncdf(m, k − 1).

Card 7194.17.1formula
Question

If X ~ Po(m₁) and Y ~ Po(m₂) are independent, what is X + Y?

Answer

Also Poisson: X + Y ~ Po(m₁ + m₂) — the means add.

Card 7204.17.1concept
Question

List conditions for a Poisson model to be suitable.

Answer

Events occur independently, at a constant average rate, singly (not in clumps), with no fixed upper limit on the count.

Card 7214.18.1concept
Question

What does the p-value of a hypothesis test measure?

Answer

The probability of getting data at least this extreme if H₀ were true. Small p = the data are surprising under H₀.

Card 7224.18.1formula
Question

State the decision rule for a hypothesis test.

Answer

p < α → reject H₀; p ≥ α → fail to reject H₀ (α = significance level).

Card 7234.18.1concept
Question

When do you use a z-test vs a t-test?

Answer

z-test when the population σ is known; t-test when σ is unknown (you only have the sample sd) — the usual case.

Card 7244.18.1concept
Question

One-sample vs two-sample test?

Answer

One-sample: compare one group's mean to a fixed claimed value. Two-sample: compare two independent groups' means.

Card 7254.18.1concept
Question

When is a test one-tailed vs two-tailed?

Answer

One-tailed for a directional H₁ (μ < or μ >); two-tailed for H₁: μ ≠ (a difference either way).

Card 7264.18.1concept
Question

What is a paired (matched) t-test for?

Answer

When the same subjects are measured twice (before/after). Test the mean of the differences d: H₀: μ_d = 0.

Card 7274.18.1concept
Question

Why must you never say you 'accept H₀'?

Answer

A test can only fail to find evidence against H₀ — absence of evidence isn't proof. Say 'do not reject H₀'.

Card 7284.18.1concept
Question

Where do the final marks in an AI hypothesis-test question usually sit?

Answer

In the in-context conclusion — naming the real quantities (bottles, runners…), not just 'reject H₀'.

Card 7294.18.2concept
Question

What is a Type I error?

Answer

Rejecting H₀ when H₀ is actually true (a false alarm — concluding there's an effect when there isn't).

Card 7304.18.2concept
Question

What is a Type II error?

Answer

Failing to reject H₀ when H₀ is actually false (a miss — concluding there's no effect when there is one).

Card 7314.18.2formula
Question

What is P(Type I error)?

Answer

It equals the significance level α (e.g. 0.05). Computed from the H₀ distribution / critical region.

Card 7324.18.2concept
Question

What is P(Type II error), and what do you need to compute it?

Answer

β = P(not rejecting H₀ | the alternative is true). You need a SPECIFIC alternative value, and you use that distribution.

Card 7334.18.2concept
Question

What is a critical (rejection) region?

Answer

The set of extreme outcomes for which you reject H₀. α = P(landing in it when H₀ is true).

Card 7344.18.2concept
Question

Which distribution gives α, and which gives β?

Answer

α comes from the H₀ distribution; β comes from the alternative (H₁) distribution.

Card 7354.18.2concept
Question

How do Type I and Type II errors trade off?

Answer

Lowering α shrinks the critical region, which makes a Type II error more likely (β rises), and vice versa.

Card 7364.18.2concept
Question

For X ~ B(20, 0.5), test H₁: p > 0.5, reject if X ≥ 15. What is P(Type I error)?

Answer

P(X ≥ 15 | p = 0.5) = 1 − P(X ≤ 14) ≈ 0.0207.

Card 7374.19.1concept
Question

What does entry (row i, column j) of a transition matrix mean?

Answer

The probability of moving FROM state j INTO state i in one step.

Card 7384.19.1concept
Question

Why do the columns of a transition matrix sum to 1?

Answer

Everyone who starts in that state (column) must end up in some state, so the probabilities over all destinations total 1.

Card 7394.19.1formula
Question

How do you step a Markov chain forward one period?

Answer

Multiply the transition matrix by the current state vector: s₁ = T s₀.

Card 7404.19.1formula
Question

State vector after n steps?

Answer

sₙ = Tⁿ s₀ — raise T to the power n, then multiply by the start vector.

Card 7414.19.1concept
Question

How do you turn '70% of A return to A, 30% switch to B' into a matrix?

Answer

Column A is 0.7 in the A-row and 0.3 in the B-row (column = where you start, row = where you end).

Card 7424.19.1concept
Question

On the GDC, how do you get the population after n weeks?

Answer

Store T and s₀, then compute T^n and the product T^n × s₀.

Card 7434.19.1concept
Question

Is a transition matrix usually symmetric?

Answer

No — the chance of A→B need not equal B→A, so it is generally not symmetric.

Card 7444.19.1concept
Question

After computing sₙ, what extra step earns marks in AI HL?

Answer

Interpret the numbers IN CONTEXT — say which group/café/patch they describe and round sensibly.

Card 7455.1.1definition
Question

What does lim_(x → a) f(x) = L mean?

Answer

As x gets closer to a (from both sides), f(x) gets closer and closer to L. The limit does not depend on f(a).

💡 Hint

Think: what does the graph HEAD TOWARDS near x = a?

Card 7465.1.1process
Question

How do you evaluate lim_(x → a) f(x) for a polynomial?

Answer

Direct substitution: replace x with a. E.g. lim_(x → 3)(2x+1) = 2(3)+1 = 7.

💡 Hint

Polynomials have limits everywhere — just substitute.

Card 7475.1.1process
Question

What do you do when substitution gives 0/0?

Answer

Factor and cancel the common factor, then substitute. E.g. (x^2-4)/(x-2) = x+2, so the limit at x=2 is 4.

💡 Hint

0/0 is a signal to factorise — never the final answer.

Card 7485.1.1concept
Question

What is a one-sided limit?

Answer

lim_(x → a^-): approach from the LEFT (values below a). lim_(x → a^+): approach from the RIGHT (values above a).

💡 Hint

The little - or + superscript shows direction.

Card 7495.1.1definition
Question

When does the two-sided limit lim_(x → a) f(x) exist?

Answer

Only when both one-sided limits exist AND are equal: lim_(x → a^-) f(x) = lim_(x → a^+) f(x).

💡 Hint

If left ≠ right, the limit does not exist (DNE).

Card 7505.1.1concept
Question

Can lim_(x → a) f(x) = L even if f(a) is undefined?

Answer

YES. The limit only depends on values near a, not AT a. Example: (x^2-4)/(x-2) is undefined at x=2 but the limit is 4.

💡 Hint

Limits and function values are different thing.

Card 7515.1.1example
Question

A table show: as x → 5, f(x) → 8 from both side. What is the limit?

Answer

lim_(x → 5) f(x) = 8. Read from the table: both sides converge to the same value.

💡 Hint

Two sides must agree.

Card 7525.1.1example
Question

Evaluate lim_(x → 4) (x^2 - 16)/(x - 4).

Answer

Factor: x^2 - 16 = (x-4)(x+4). Cancel (x-4). Substitute x=4: 4+4 = 8. The limit is 8.

💡 Hint

Spot the difference of two square.

Card 7535.10.1concept
Question

What is the second derivative f''(x)?

Answer

The derivative of f'(x) — the rate of change of the gradient. Written f''(x) or d²y/dx².

Card 7545.10.1formula
Question

What does f''(x) > 0 tell you about a curve?

Answer

It is concave up (valley shaped) there — the gradient is increasing.

Card 7555.10.1formula
Question

What does f''(x) < 0 tell you about a curve?

Answer

It is concave down (dome shaped) there — the gradient is decreasing.

Card 7565.10.1concept
Question

How do you find a point of inflexion?

Answer

Solve f''(x) = 0, then confirm f'' changes sign across that x (concavity flips).

Card 7575.10.1formula
Question

State the second-derivative test for a stationary point.

Answer

At f'(a) = 0: f''(a) < 0 → local maximum; f''(a) > 0 → local minimum; f''(a) = 0 → inconclusive.

Card 7585.10.1concept
Question

What happens if f''(a) = 0 at a stationary point?

Answer

The second-derivative test is inconclusive — go back to checking the sign of f' on each side.

Card 7595.10.1concept
Question

In motion, what is the second derivative of displacement?

Answer

Acceleration (displacement → velocity → acceleration by differentiating twice).

Card 7605.10.1concept
Question

Find f''(x) for f(x) = x³ − 6x² + 5x + 2.

Answer

f'(x) = 3x² − 12x + 5, so f''(x) = 6x − 12.

Card 7615.11.1formula
Question

What is the reverse power rule for ∫xⁿ dx?

Answer

x^(n+1)/(n+1) + C, valid for n ≠ −1 (raise the power by one, divide by the new power).

Card 7625.11.1concept
Question

Why does an indefinite integral need + C?

Answer

Curves differing only by a constant height have the same slope, so the antiderivative is a whole family — + C names the unknown member.

Card 7635.11.1formula
Question

What is ∫1/x dx?

Answer

ln|x| + C (the n = −1 exception to the power rule).

Card 7645.11.1formula
Question

What is ∫eˣ dx?

Answer

eˣ + C — the exponential is its own integral.

Card 7655.11.1formula
Question

∫1/(ax + b) dx = ?

Answer

(1/a) ln|ax + b| + C — divide by a, the derivative of the linear inside.

Card 7665.11.1concept
Question

How does substitution work?

Answer

Let u = inside, find du = g′(x) dx, rewrite the integral fully in u, integrate, then replace u with the inside again.

Card 7675.11.1concept
Question

Find ∫ x·e^(x²) dx.

Answer

½ e^(x²) + C (let u = x², du = 2x dx, so ∫½eᵘ du).

Card 7685.11.1concept
Question

How do you check an integral is correct?

Answer

Differentiate your answer — it should return the original integrand.

Card 7695.12.1formula
Question

What integral gives the area under a curve y = f(x) above the x-axis from a to b?

Answer

A = ∫ₐᵇ y dx — the definite integral of y between the two x-values.

Card 7705.12.1formula
Question

What integral gives the area between two curves f (top) and g (bottom)?

Answer

A = ∫ₐᵇ (f(x) − g(x)) dx, where a and b are the x-values where the curves meet.

Card 7715.12.1concept
Question

How do you find the limits for an 'area between two curves' question?

Answer

Solve f(x) = g(x) (use the GDC to find the intersection points); those x-values are the limits a and b.

Card 7725.12.1concept
Question

How do you find the area between a curve and the y-axis?

Answer

Rearrange to x = (function of y) and integrate ∫ x dy between two y-values.

Card 7735.12.1concept
Question

Why can a plain definite integral give the wrong area?

Answer

Area below the x-axis is counted as negative, so the integral gives a signed total; split at the roots (or integrate |f(x)|) for true area.

Card 7745.12.1concept
Question

In AI, how do you usually evaluate an area integral?

Answer

Set up the integral by hand for the marks, then let the GDC evaluate it (a calculator is allowed on every paper).

Card 7755.12.1concept
Question

How do you decide which curve is the 'top' between two curves?

Answer

Test one x-value in the interval; the curve with the larger value there is the top.

Card 7765.12.1concept
Question

A flower bed edge is y = 0.5x², 0 ≤ x ≤ 4. What is its area?

Answer

∫₀⁴ 0.5x² dx = 32/3 ≈ 10.7 (square units).

Card 7775.12.2formula
Question

Volume of revolution about the x-axis?

Answer

V = ∫ₐᵇ π y² dx — discs of radius y along x.

Card 7785.12.2formula
Question

Volume of revolution about the y-axis?

Answer

V = ∫꜀ᵈ π x² dy — discs of radius x; rewrite x² in terms of y, use y-limits.

Card 7795.12.2concept
Question

Why π·(radius)² in the integral?

Answer

Each thin slice is a disc; a disc's area is π·radius², and the volume sums the discs.

Card 7805.12.2concept
Question

Rotating about the y-axis: what must you change?

Answer

Express x² in terms of y AND switch the limits to the y-values.

Card 7815.12.2concept
Question

Volume of y = x² (0≤x≤2) rotated about the y-axis?

Answer

x² = y, y: 0→4, V = ∫₀⁴ πy dy = 8π ≈ 25.1.

Card 7825.12.2formula
Question

Volume between two curves rotated about the x-axis?

Answer

V = ∫ π(y_outer² − y_inner²) dx — subtract the inner disc.

Card 7835.12.2concept
Question

Common volume-of-revolution slip?

Answer

Forgetting to square the radius, dropping the π, or keeping x-limits on a y-axis solid.

Card 7845.12.2concept
Question

How does the GDC help with volumes of revolution?

Answer

Type the set-up integral ∫ π(radius)² and let it evaluate — a calculator is allowed on every AI paper.

Card 7855.13.1formula
Question

How do you get velocity and acceleration from position s(t)?

Answer

Differentiate: v = ds/dt (first derivative) and a = dv/dt = d²s/dt² (second derivative).

Card 7865.13.1formula
Question

How do you get velocity and position from acceleration a(t)?

Answer

Integrate: v = ∫a dt and s = ∫v dt — each integration adds a + C found from an initial condition (e.g. v(0), s(0)).

Card 7875.13.1concept
Question

What does 'instantaneously at rest' mean?

Answer

The velocity is zero: solve v = 0. The particle changes direction only where v actually changes sign.

Card 7885.13.1concept
Question

What is the difference between displacement and distance travelled?

Answer

Displacement = ∫v dt (signed net change in position); distance travelled = ∫|v| dt (total path length, always ≥ 0).

Card 7895.13.1concept
Question

How do you find total distance travelled by hand?

Answer

Find where v = 0, split the integral at those times, integrate each piece, then add the MAGNITUDES (or integrate |v| on the GDC).

Card 7905.13.1concept
Question

How do you find the greatest velocity in the interior of an interval?

Answer

Solve a = 0 (where dv/dt = 0, velocity is at a max/min), then also check the endpoints of the interval.

Card 7915.13.1concept
Question

Why does each integration in kinematics need a + C?

Answer

Integration only recovers the shape; the + C is the unknown starting value, fixed by an initial condition such as v(0) or s(0).

Card 7925.13.1concept
Question

A cyclist has v(t) = t² − 6t + 8 on 0 ≤ t ≤ 5. Displacement vs distance?

Answer

Displacement = ∫₀⁵ v dt = 20/3 ≈ 6.67 m; distance = ∫|v| dt (split at t = 2, 4) = 28/3 ≈ 9.33 m.

Card 7935.14.1concept
Question

When is a first-order differential equation 'separable'?

Answer

When dy/dx can be written as f(x)·g(y) — an x-part times a y-part — so the variables can be split onto opposite sides.

Card 7945.14.1concept
Question

What are the steps to solve a separable DE?

Answer

Separate (∫1/g(y) dy = ∫f(x) dx), integrate both sides with ONE + C, use the initial condition to find C, then make y the subject and interpret.

Card 7955.14.1concept
Question

How many constants of integration appear when you solve a separable DE?

Answer

Just one + C — it absorbs the constant from each side; write it once on the side you integrate last.

Card 7965.14.1formula
Question

What is the solution of dy/dx = ky?

Answer

y = A e^(kx), where A is the value at x = 0; k > 0 is growth, k < 0 is decay.

Card 7975.14.1concept
Question

In y = A e^(kx), what does the constant A represent?

Answer

The starting value — the value of y when x = 0 (found from the initial condition).

Card 7985.14.1concept
Question

Solve dV/dt = −2√V with V(0) = 400.

Answer

∫V^(−1/2) dV = ∫−2 dt ⇒ 2√V = −2t + C; V(0)=400 ⇒ C = 40; so √V = 20 − t and V = (20 − t)².

Card 7995.14.1concept
Question

Newton's law of cooling dθ/dt = −k(θ − r): what is the long-term temperature?

Answer

θ → r, the room temperature, as t → ∞ (the exponential term decays to 0). The solution is θ = r + A e^(−kt).

Card 8005.14.1concept
Question

Why is a pure exponential growth model dN/dt = kN unrealistic for large N?

Answer

It grows without any limit; real populations are capped by resources, so a logistic model (rate ∝ N(M − N)) is needed once N is large.

Card 8015.15.1concept
Question

In a slope field for dy/dx = f(x, y), how do you find the gradient of the segment at a point (x, y)?

Answer

Substitute the point into f: the gradient there is f(x, y).

Card 8025.15.1concept
Question

What is an isocline?

Answer

The set of points f(x, y) = c where every segment has the same gradient c (all parallel).

Card 8035.15.1concept
Question

What does f(x, y) = 0 tell you about a slope field?

Answer

Those points have flat (horizontal) segments — solution curves have their maximum/minimum (turning) points there.

Card 8045.15.1concept
Question

How do you sketch a solution curve through a given point?

Answer

Start at the point and glide so the curve is always tangent to the nearby segments; it never crosses a segment.

Card 8055.15.1concept
Question

In a slope field, where is a solution curve increasing?

Answer

Wherever f(x, y) > 0 (the segments tilt upward); it decreases where f(x, y) < 0.

Card 8065.15.1concept
Question

For dy/dx = x + 0.5y, what is the gradient at (2, 4)?

Answer

f(2, 4) = 2 + 0.5(4) = 4 (a steep, rising segment).

Card 8075.15.1concept
Question

For the cooling model dy/dx = −0.2(y − 20), where are the segments flat?

Answer

On the line y = 20 (room temperature): set −0.2(y − 20) = 0 ⇒ y = 20, the equilibrium.

Card 8085.15.1concept
Question

Is a GDC allowed when working with slope fields in AI HL?

Answer

Yes — a GDC is allowed on every AI paper (P1, P2, P3); use it to evaluate f at points and solve f = c for isoclines.

Card 8095.16.1formula
Question

What is the Euler recurrence for dy/dx = f(x, y)?

Answer

y_(n+1) = y_n + h·f(x_n, y_n) and x_(n+1) = x_n + h, starting from (x₀, y₀).

Card 8105.16.1formula
Question

How many Euler steps reach a target x from x₀ with step length h?

Answer

number of steps = (target − x₀) ÷ h. E.g. x = 1 to x = 2 with h = 0.25 is 4 steps.

Card 8115.16.1concept
Question

What does each Euler step actually do geometrically?

Answer

It moves along a short STRAIGHT line at the gradient measured at the current point — so the path only approximates the true curve.

Card 8125.16.1concept
Question

Is Euler's method exact?

Answer

No — it is an approximation. A smaller step length h gives more steps and a more accurate estimate, but never the exact value.

Card 8135.16.1concept
Question

Does Euler over- or under-estimate?

Answer

It depends on the curve's concavity: it tends to UNDER-estimate for a concave-up curve and OVER-estimate for a concave-down curve.

Card 8145.16.1concept
Question

Which gradient does each Euler step use?

Answer

The gradient f(xₙ, yₙ) at the START of the step (the point you are currently at), not at the new point.

Card 8155.16.1formula
Question

How do you find the percentage error of an Euler estimate?

Answer

percentage error = |approx − exact| ÷ exact × 100%, using the exact solution given in the question.

Card 8165.16.1concept
Question

What is the GDC route for Euler's method in AI?

Answer

Store the recurrence as a recursive sequence (or fill a table of n, xₙ, yₙ, gradient); a calculator is allowed on every AI paper.

Card 8175.17.1concept
Question

How do you write a coupled linear system in matrix form, and where is its equilibrium?

Answer

d/dt(x, y) = M(x, y) with M = (a, b; c, d); the only equilibrium is the origin (0, 0) (when M is invertible).

Card 8185.17.1concept
Question

What do the eigenvalues of M tell you about the equilibrium?

Answer

Their nature classifies it: same-sign real → node, opposite-sign real → saddle, complex → spiral, purely imaginary → centre.

Card 8195.17.1concept
Question

Two real eigenvalues, both NEGATIVE — what type of equilibrium?

Answer

A stable node (sink): every trajectory decays to the origin because each e^(λt) → 0.

Card 8205.17.1concept
Question

Two real eigenvalues of OPPOSITE sign — what type?

Answer

A saddle point — always unstable (pulled in one direction, flung out the other).

Card 8215.17.1concept
Question

Complex eigenvalues a ± bi — stable or unstable spiral?

Answer

Spiral; stable (inward) if a < 0, unstable (outward) if a > 0. If a = 0 it is a centre (closed loops).

Card 8225.17.1concept
Question

What is special about a real eigenvector's direction in a phase portrait?

Answer

It is a straight-line trajectory through the origin; the state moves IN if its eigenvalue is negative, OUT if positive.

Card 8235.17.1formula
Question

Write the general solution of a coupled system with real eigenvalues λ₁, λ₂.

Answer

(x, y) = A·e^(λ₁t)·v₁ + B·e^(λ₂t)·v₂, with v₁, v₂ the eigenvectors and A, B set by the starting state.

Card 8245.17.1concept
Question

On the GDC, what is the calculator route for this topic?

Answer

Enter M as a matrix and use the eigenvalue/eigenvector tools; use it for Euler's method too (GDC allowed on every AI paper).

Card 8255.18.1concept
Question

How do you reduce a 2nd-order DE d²x/dt² = g(t, x, dx/dt) to first-order equations?

Answer

Let v = dx/dt. Then dx/dt = v and dv/dt = g(t, x, v) — a coupled first-order system.

Card 8265.18.1formula
Question

Write the Euler update for a coupled 2nd-order system.

Answer

x_(n+1) = x_n + h·v_n; v_(n+1) = v_n + h·g(t_n, x_n, v_n); t_(n+1) = t_n + h.

Card 8275.18.1concept
Question

In one Euler step of a coupled system, which values feed the rates?

Answer

All rates use the OLD row's values; update x and v together, then advance t — never reuse a freshly-updated value within the same step.

Card 8285.18.1concept
Question

How many Euler steps reach a target time t_end?

Answer

steps = (t_end − t_0) ÷ h. Always re-check this count — the off-by-one error is the classic trap.

Card 8295.18.1concept
Question

How does the step length h affect Euler's accuracy?

Answer

A smaller h is more accurate (shorter tangent steps stray less from the true curve) but needs more steps.

Card 8305.18.1concept
Question

Reduce d²x/dt² = −4x with v = dx/dt.

Answer

dx/dt = v and dv/dt = −4x (a spring with k = 4).

Card 8315.18.1formula
Question

How do you find the percentage error of an Euler estimate?

Answer

|estimate − exact| ÷ |exact| × 100%.

Card 8325.18.1concept
Question

Which AI exam paper most features 2nd-order Euler / coupled systems?

Answer

Paper 3 — the extended modelling investigations (often with phase portraits and eigenvalue DE solutions). A GDC is allowed throughout.

Card 8335.2.1definition
Question

What does it mean for a function to be INCREASING on an interval?

Answer

f is increasing if f'(x) > 0 for all x in that interval. As x gets bigger, f(x) gets bigger — the graph goes UP.

💡 Hint

Positive derivative = going up.

Card 8345.2.1definition
Question

What does it mean for a function to be DECREASING on an interval?

Answer

f is decreasing if f'(x) < 0 for all x in that interval. As x gets bigger, f(x) gets smaller — the graph goes DOWN.

💡 Hint

Negative derivative = going down.

Card 8355.2.1process
Question

How do you find where a function is increasing or decreasing?

Answer

1) Find f'(x). 2) Solve f'(x) = 0 — these are the critical x-values. 3) Test a value in each interval: if f'(x) > 0, increasing; if f'(x) < 0, decreasing.

💡 Hint

Critical points divide the number line into intervals.

Card 8365.2.1example
Question

f(x) = x² − 4x. Where is it increasing? Where is it decreasing?

Answer

f'(x) = 2x − 4. Critical point: x = 2. For x < 2: f'(x) < 0 → DECREASING. For x > 2: f'(x) > 0 → INCREASING.

💡 Hint

Solve f'(x)=0, then test each side.

Card 8375.2.1concept
Question

What does f'(x) = 0 tell you about increasing/decreasing?

Answer

It marks the boundary between increasing and decreasing. At that point, the function is momentarily flat — it is a critical (stationary) point.

💡 Hint

f'(x)=0 is the turning-point signal.

Card 8385.2.1process
Question

What is the sign diagram method?

Answer

Draw a number line. Mark critical x-values. Pick one test x in each interval, evaluate f'(x). Label each interval + (increasing) or − (decreasing).

💡 Hint

One test point per interval is enough.

Card 8395.2.1example
Question

f(x) = −x² + 6x. Is f increasing at x = 2?

Answer

f'(x) = −2x + 6. Substitute x = 2: f'(2) = 2 > 0. Yes — f is increasing at x = 2.

💡 Hint

Substitute x into f'(x) and check the sign.

Card 8405.2.1concept
Question

If f'(x) > 0 everywhere, what does that mean for the function?

Answer

The function is increasing for all x. It never turns around. Example: f(x) = x³ has f'(x) = 3x² ≥ 0 but is still overall increasing.

💡 Hint

Always increasing = positive derivative throughout.

Card 8415.3.1concept
Question

What does the derivative f′(x) tell you?

Answer

f′(x) is the gradient function. It gives the gradient of the curve y = f(x) at any x-value. Substitute a number into f′(x) to get the gradient at that point.

💡 Hint

Think: steepness, not height.

Card 8425.3.1definition
Question

What does the notation dy/dx mean?

Answer

dy/dx is "the derivative of y with respect to x". It is exactly the same thing as f′(x). Both notations appear in IB papers.

Card 8435.3.1concept
Question

What is the sign of f′(x) when the curve is rising?

Answer

f′(x) > 0 when the curve is increasing (rising left to right). f′(x) < 0 when decreasing. f′(x) = 0 at a local maximum or minimum.

Card 8445.3.1concept
Question

A curve has a local maximum at x = 3. What is f′(3)?

Answer

f′(3) = 0. At any local maximum (or minimum), the tangent is horizontal, so the gradient is zero.

💡 Hint

Flat tangent = zero gradient.

Card 8455.3.1concept
Question

Why does a straight line NOT need differentiation to find its gradient?

Answer

A straight line has the same gradient everywhere. For y = mx + c, the gradient is always m. Only curves have a different gradient at each point.

Card 8465.3.1concept
Question

V(t) is the volume (litres) in a tank. What does V′(t) = −5 mean?

Answer

The volume is decreasing at a rate of 5 litres per unit time. The negative sign means the function is falling. Always include units in your interpretation.

💡 Hint

Rate of change — always state units.

Card 8475.3.1concept
Question

What is the difference between f(a) and f′(a)?

Answer

f(a) is the y-value (height) of the curve at x = a.\nf′(a) is the gradient (steepness) of the curve at x = a.\nThey are completely different quantities.

Card 8485.3.1concept
Question

A curve is high up on the graph (large y-value) at x = 5, but f′(5) = 0. Is that possible?

Answer

Yes. f(x) and f′(x) are independent. A curve can be at any height while being momentarily flat — for example, at the top of a hill.

Card 8495.3.2formula
Question

State the power rule for differentiation.

Answer

d/dx[axⁿ] = naxⁿ⁻¹. Multiply the coefficient by the power, then reduce the power by one.

Card 8505.3.2formula
Question

Differentiate f(x) = 5x⁴.

Answer

f′(x) = 20x³. (Multiply 5 by 4 = 20, reduce power from 4 to 3.)

Card 8515.3.2formula
Question

What is d/dx[8]?

Answer

0. The derivative of any constant is zero.

Card 8525.3.2formula
Question

What is d/dx[−7x]?

Answer

−7. The derivative of ax is a. Here a = −7.

Card 8535.3.2formula
Question

Find f′(x) for f(x) = 3x³ − 2x² + x − 9.

Answer

f′(x) = 9x² − 4x + 1. Apply the power rule to each term. The constant −9 disappears. The linear x term gives 1.

Card 8545.3.2concept
Question

Before differentiating y = x(4x − 1), what must you do first?

Answer

Expand: y = 4x² − x. Then differentiate: dy/dx = 8x − 1. You cannot apply the power rule inside a product without expanding.

Card 8555.3.2formula
Question

Find the gradient of y = 2x³ − x at x = 2.

Answer

dy/dx = 6x² − 1. At x = 2: 6(4) − 1 = 23.

💡 Hint

Differentiate first, then substitute.

Card 8565.3.2concept
Question

For f(x) = x², you get f(3) = 9 and f′(3) = 6. What does each number represent?

Answer

f(3) = 9 is the y-value of the curve at x = 3. f′(3) = 6 is the gradient of the curve at x = 3. Different quantities with different meanings.

Card 8575.4.1formula
Question

State the point-slope form used to write a tangent equation.

Answer

y − y₁ = m(x − x₁), where m is the gradient and (x₁, y₁) is the point of tangency.

Card 8585.4.1concept
Question

The three steps for finding a tangent equation — what are they?

Answer

1. Differentiate f(x) to get f′(x).\n2. Substitute x₁ into f′(x) to get the gradient m.\n3. Write y − y₁ = m(x − x₁) and simplify.

Card 8595.4.1formula
Question

Find the gradient of the tangent to y = x² at x = 3.

Answer

dy/dx = 2x. At x = 3: m = 6.

Card 8605.4.1formula
Question

Find the equation of the tangent to y = x² + 1 at x = 2.

Answer

dy/dx = 2x → m = 4. y₁ = 5. Tangent: y − 5 = 4(x − 2) → y = 4x − 3.

Card 8615.4.1concept
Question

Why do you substitute x₁ into f(x) (not f′(x)) to find y₁?

Answer

Because f(x) gives y-values (heights). f′(x) gives gradients. You need the y-coordinate of the point of tangency — that comes from the original function.

Card 8625.4.1concept
Question

How do you find x when you are given the tangent gradient instead of the x-value?

Answer

Set f′(x) = given gradient and solve for x. There may be one or two solutions. Find y at each solution using f(x).

Card 8635.4.1formula
Question

Find the tangent to f(x) = x³ at x = −1.

Answer

f′(x) = 3x². m = 3. f(−1) = −1 → point (−1, −1). Tangent: y + 1 = 3(x + 1) → y = 3x + 2.

💡 Hint

Check signs carefully.

Card 8645.4.1concept
Question

What does the tangent line tell you about the curve near the point of tangency?

Answer

The tangent is the best linear approximation to the curve at that point. It has exactly the same gradient as the curve at that point — but the curve will curve away from the tangent for x-values further away.

Card 8655.4.2formula
Question

State the relationship between the tangent gradient and the normal gradient.

Answer

m_tangent × m_normal = −1, so m_normal = −1/m_tangent. The normal is perpendicular to the tangent.

Card 8665.4.2formula
Question

The tangent gradient at a point is 5. What is the normal gradient?

Answer

m_n = −1/5.

Card 8675.4.2formula
Question

The tangent gradient at a point is −3. What is the normal gradient?

Answer

m_n = −1/(−3) = 1/3. Two negatives cancel.

💡 Hint

Watch the signs — two negatives make positive.

Card 8685.4.2formula
Question

Find the gradient of the normal to y = x² − 2x at x = 3.

Answer

dy/dx = 2x − 2. m_t = 4. m_n = −1/4.

Card 8695.4.2formula
Question

Find the equation of the normal to y = x² at (3, 9).

Answer

dy/dx = 2x → m_t = 6 → m_n = −1/6. Normal: y − 9 = −(1/6)(x − 3) → y = −(1/6)x + 19/2.

Card 8705.4.2concept
Question

The tangent at a point is horizontal. What does the normal look like?

Answer

The normal is vertical: a line of the form x = x₁. You cannot divide −1 by zero.

Card 8715.4.2concept
Question

Both the tangent and normal pass through the same point. True or false?

Answer

True. Both lines pass through the point of tangency (x₁, y₁). They differ only in their gradients.

Card 8725.4.2concept
Question

What is the single most common error in normal-line questions?

Answer

Using the tangent gradient (from f′) directly as the normal gradient, without applying m_n = −1/m_t. Always take the negative reciprocal.

Card 8735.5.1definition
Question

What does the ∫ symbol mean?

Answer

"Integrate with respect to x." The integral symbol ∫ paired with dx means find the antiderivative — the reverse of differentiation.

💡 Hint

It is the elongated S for "sum".

Card 8745.5.1formula
Question

State the power rule for integration.

Answer

∫xⁿ dx = xⁿ⁺¹/(n+1) + C, provided n ≠ −1. Add 1 to the power, divide by the new power, add C.

💡 Hint

Opposite of the power rule for differentiation.

Card 8755.5.1concept
Question

Why must you always include +C in an indefinite integral?

Answer

Because constants disappear when you differentiate. Infinitely many functions have the same derivative — +C represents all of them.

💡 Hint

Example: d/dx(x²+5) = d/dx(x²−7) = 2x.

Card 8765.5.1example
Question

∫(4x³ − 6x + 2) dx = ?

Answer

x⁴ − 3x² + 2x + C. Integrate each term: 4·x⁴/4 = x⁴, 6·x²/2 = 3x², 2·x = 2x.

💡 Hint

Integrate term by term.

Card 8775.5.1process
Question

What is the first step when integrating a product like x(x+3)?

Answer

Expand the brackets first: x(x+3) = x² + 3x. Then integrate: x³/3 + 3x²/2 + C.

💡 Hint

You cannot integrate products directly — expand first.

Card 8785.5.1example
Question

∫x^(1/2) dx = ?

Answer

(2/3)x^(3/2) + C. Add 1: 1/2 + 1 = 3/2. Divide by 3/2: divide by 3/2 = multiply by 2/3.

💡 Hint

Don't panic with fractions — same rule applies.

Card 8795.5.1concept
Question

How do you check an integral is correct?

Answer

Differentiate your answer. If you get back the original integrand, your integral is correct.

💡 Hint

Differentiation and integration are inverse operations.

Card 8805.5.1example
Question

∫(x² − 3)/x dx = ?

Answer

Rewrite: x²/x − 3/x = x − 3x⁻¹. Integrate: x²/2 − 3ln|x| + C.

💡 Hint

Split the fraction first, then use power rule.

Card 8815.5.2definition
Question

What is a definite integral?

Answer

An integral with limits [a, b] that gives a specific number — the signed area between the curve and the x-axis from x = a to x = b.

💡 Hint

Unlike indefinite integrals, no +C is needed.

Card 8825.5.2formula
Question

State the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.

Answer

∫[a to b] f(x) dx = F(b) − F(a), where F is any antiderivative of f.

💡 Hint

Evaluate F at b, then subtract F at a.

Card 8835.5.2example
Question

Evaluate ∫[1 to 3] 2x dx.

Answer

F(x) = x². F(3) − F(1) = 9 − 1 = 8.

💡 Hint

Integrate to get F(x), then apply limits.

Card 8845.5.2concept
Question

If f(x) < 0 on [a, b], what does the definite integral give?

Answer

A negative number. The integral gives signed area — negative when the curve is below the x-axis. For total area, take the absolute value.

💡 Hint

Below x-axis = negative integral.

Card 8855.5.2process
Question

How do you find the area between two curves y = f(x) and y = g(x)?

Answer

1) Find intersections: solve f(x) = g(x) to get limits a and b. 2) Identify the top function. 3) Integrate [f(x) − g(x)] from a to b.

💡 Hint

Always: top minus bottom.

Card 8865.5.2example
Question

Find the area under y = x² + 1 from x = 0 to x = 2.

Answer

∫[0 to 2] (x²+1) dx = [x³/3 + x] from 0 to 2 = (8/3 + 2) − 0 = 14/3 ≈ 4.67 square units.

💡 Hint

Integrate then evaluate F(2) − F(0).

Card 8875.5.2concept
Question

On IB Paper 2, how can you evaluate definite integrals?

Answer

Use your GDC. But always write the integral notation first (e.g., ∫[a to b] f(x) dx = ...). Marks are given for the setup, not just the answer.

💡 Hint

GDC gives the number; marks need the setup.

Card 8885.5.2example
Question

Area between y = x and y = x² from x = 0 to x = 1.

Answer

∫[0 to 1] (x − x²) dx = [x²/2 − x³/3] from 0 to 1 = 1/2 − 1/3 = 1/6 square units.

💡 Hint

y=x is above y=x² on [0,1]. Integrate top − bottom.

Card 8895.5.3definition
Question

What is an initial condition in integration?

Answer

A specific point (x₀, y₀) that the function passes through. Used to find the exact value of the constant C.

💡 Hint

Initial condition removes the ambiguity of +C.

Card 8905.5.3process
Question

f'(x) = 4x − 1, f(2) = 5. Find f(x).

Answer

Step 1: Integrate → f(x) = 2x² − x + C. Step 2: f(2) = 8 − 2 + C = 5 → C = −1. Answer: f(x) = 2x² − x − 1.

💡 Hint

Substitute the point AFTER integrating.

Card 8915.5.3concept
Question

If f'(x) = 6x and the curve passes through (0, 4), what is C?

Answer

Integrate: f(x) = 3x² + C. Substitute (0, 4): 3(0) + C = 4 → C = 4. So f(x) = 3x² + 4.

💡 Hint

Easiest initial condition: use x = 0.

Card 8925.5.3concept
Question

In kinematics, if v(t) = 3t², s(0) = 5, what is s(t)?

Answer

Integrate: s(t) = t³ + C. Use s(0) = 5: C = 5. So s(t) = t³ + 5.

💡 Hint

v = ds/dt so s = ∫v dt + C.

Card 8935.5.3concept
Question

How many initial conditions do you need to fully determine a function after integrating twice?

Answer

Two initial conditions — one for each integration, since each introduces a new constant (C₁ and C₂).

💡 Hint

Each ∫ adds one unknown constant.

Card 8945.5.3example
Question

a(t) = 10, v(0) = 3, s(0) = 1. Find s(t).

Answer

v(t) = 10t + 3 (use v(0)=3 → C₁=3). s(t) = 5t² + 3t + C₂. Use s(0)=1 → C₂=1. s(t) = 5t² + 3t + 1.

💡 Hint

Integrate twice with separate constants.

Card 8955.5.3concept
Question

What is the "particular solution" vs "general solution" of an integral?

Answer

General solution: f(x) + C (all possible solutions). Particular solution: the specific function once C is found using an initial condition.

💡 Hint

Initial condition converts general → particular.

Card 8965.5.3example
Question

dy/dx = 3x² + 2x, and y = 10 when x = 1. Find y.

Answer

Integrate: y = x³ + x² + C. Use (1, 10): 1 + 1 + C = 10 → C = 8. So y = x³ + x² + 8.

💡 Hint

Substitute after integrating, not before.

Card 8975.6.1definition
Question

What is a stationary point?

Answer

A point where f'(x) = 0. The tangent is horizontal — the function momentarily stops increasing or decreasing.

💡 Hint

f'(x)=0 → flat tangent.

Card 8985.6.1definition
Question

What is a local MAXIMUM?

Answer

A stationary point where the function changes from INCREASING to DECREASING. f'(x) goes from + to −. The point is the highest nearby.

💡 Hint

Peak: + before, − after.

Card 8995.6.1definition
Question

What is a local MINIMUM?

Answer

A stationary point where the function changes from DECREASING to INCREASING. f'(x) goes from − to +. The point is the lowest nearby.

💡 Hint

Valley: − before, + after.

Card 9005.6.1process
Question

How do you find and classify stationary points?

Answer

1) Find f'(x). 2) Solve f'(x) = 0. 3) Use a sign diagram: if + then − → local max; if − then + → local min. 4) Find the y-value using f(x).

💡 Hint

Sign diagram to classify: look either side of critical x.

Card 9015.6.1example
Question

f(x) = x³ − 3x. Find and classify the stationary points.

Answer

f'(x) = 3x² − 3 = 3(x−1)(x+1). Critical points: x = 1 and x = −1. Sign: +,−,+ → x=−1 local max, x=1 local min. y values: f(−1)=2, f(1)=−2.

💡 Hint

Factor f'(x) to find critical x, then sign diagram.

Card 9025.6.1concept
Question

What is a point of inflection? Is it a stationary point?

Answer

An inflection point is where concavity changes. It is only a stationary point if f'(x) = 0 there too (a "saddle point" like x=0 on y=x³).

💡 Hint

Inflection ≠ stationary by itself.

Card 9035.6.1example
Question

f(x) = 2x³ − 3x². Find the local maximum point.

Answer

f'(x) = 6x² − 6x = 6x(x−1). Critical x: 0 and 1. Sign diagram: + before x=0, − between 0 and 1. So x=0 is local max. f(0) = 0.

💡 Hint

Check sign BOTH sides of each critical point.

Card 9045.6.1formula
Question

What does the second derivative test say? (f''(x) method)

Answer

At a critical point where f'(x)=0: if f''(x) < 0 → local max; if f''(x) > 0 → local min; if f''(x) = 0 → inconclusive, use sign diagram.

💡 Hint

Second derivative shortcut — but sign diagram always works.

Card 9055.7.1definition
Question

What is optimisation in calculus?

Answer

Finding the maximum or minimum value of a quantity. You use derivatives to locate stationary points, then determine if it is a max or min.

💡 Hint

Optimise = find the best value (highest or lowest).

Card 9065.7.1process
Question

What are the steps to solve an optimisation problem?

Answer

1) Write an expression for the quantity to optimise. 2) Express it in terms of ONE variable (use a constraint). 3) Differentiate and set f'(x) = 0. 4) Solve and classify (max or min). 5) State the answer with units.

💡 Hint

Key step: get to one variable before differentiating.

Card 9075.7.1concept
Question

How do you check if a stationary point is a maximum or minimum in a context problem?

Answer

Use a sign diagram of f'(x), OR check the endpoints. In closed-interval problems, also evaluate f at the endpoints.

💡 Hint

Sign diagram: + then − = max; − then + = min.

Card 9085.7.1example
Question

A farmer has 80m of fencing. Maximise the area of a rectangular enclosure against a wall (3 sides fenced).

Answer

Let width = x. Then length = 80 − 2x. Area A = x(80−2x) = 80x − 2x². A' = 80 − 4x = 0 → x = 20. A = 20 × 40 = 800 m².

💡 Hint

Write Area in terms of x using the fencing constraint.

Card 9095.7.1concept
Question

What is a constraint in an optimisation problem?

Answer

A rule that links two or more variables. You use it to eliminate one variable so you can write everything in terms of one unknown.

💡 Hint

Constraint lets you go from 2 unknowns to 1.

Card 9105.7.1example
Question

Revenue R(x) = 40x − x². What value of x maximises revenue?

Answer

R'(x) = 40 − 2x = 0 → x = 20. R'(20) = −2 < 0 → local max. Max revenue = R(20) = 40(20)−400 = 400.

💡 Hint

Second derivative negative confirms maximum.

Card 9115.7.1concept
Question

In an IB optimisation question, what must you always include in the answer?

Answer

1) The optimal VALUE of x. 2) The optimal value of the quantity (max area, min cost, etc.). 3) Confirmation it is a max or min (sign diagram or second derivative). 4) Units if the problem has them.

💡 Hint

IB mark schemes reward classification + full answer.

Card 9125.7.1example
Question

Cost C = 2x² − 12x + 20. Find the minimum cost and the value of x.

Answer

C' = 4x − 12 = 0 → x = 3. C'(3) = 4 > 0 → local min. Min cost = 2(9) − 12(3) + 20 = 18 − 36 + 20 = 2.

💡 Hint

Positive second derivative = minimum.

Card 9135.8.1formula
Question

State the trapezoid rule formula.

Answer

A ≈ (h/2)(y₀ + 2y₁ + 2y₂ + ... + 2yₙ₋₁ + yₙ), where h = (b − a)/n and yᵢ = f(a + i·h).

💡 Hint

Interior values are multiplied by 2. First and last by 1.

Card 9145.8.1definition
Question

What does h represent in the trapezoid rule?

Answer

h is the step width — the horizontal width of each trapezoid strip. h = (b − a) / n.

💡 Hint

b and a are the limits; n is the number of strips.

Card 9155.8.1concept
Question

Why do interior y-values get multiplied by 2 in the trapezoid rule?

Answer

Because each interior vertical line is shared by two adjacent trapezoids — it counts as a side of both.

💡 Hint

Adjacent trapezoids share a boundary.

Card 9165.8.1example
Question

Using the trapezoid rule with n = 2, estimate ∫[0 to 2] x² dx.

Answer

h = 1. y₀ = 0, y₁ = 1, y₂ = 4. A ≈ (1/2)(0 + 2×1 + 4) = 0.5 × 6 = 3. (Exact = 8/3 ≈ 2.67)

💡 Hint

x-values: 0, 1, 2. Find y = x² at each.

Card 9175.8.1concept
Question

For a concave-up curve, does the trapezoid rule give an over- or underestimate?

Answer

Overestimate. The trapezoids sit above the curve, so the total estimated area is larger than the actual area.

💡 Hint

Think: concave up = smile = curve dips below the trapezoid.

Card 9185.8.1concept
Question

For a concave-down curve, does the trapezoid rule give an over- or underestimate?

Answer

Underestimate. The trapezoids fall below the curve, so the estimated area is smaller than the actual area.

💡 Hint

Think: concave down = frown = curve rises above the trapezoid.

Card 9195.8.1process
Question

What are the 4 steps for applying the trapezoid rule?

Answer

1. Calculate h = (b−a)/n. 2. List all x-values: a, a+h, a+2h, ..., b. 3. Calculate yᵢ = f(xᵢ) for each. 4. Apply: A ≈ (h/2)(y₀ + 2y₁ + ... + yₙ).

💡 Hint

Write the y-values in a table to stay organised.

Card 9205.8.1concept
Question

When is the trapezoid rule exact (no error)?

Answer

When the function is linear (a straight line). Trapezoids perfectly fit straight-line sections with no gap or overlap.

💡 Hint

Trapezoids are exactly trapezoid-shaped — they match straight lines perfectly.

Card 9215.9.1formula
Question

What is the power rule for d/dx(xⁿ)?

Answer

n·x^(n−1) — bring the power down as a multiplier, then reduce the power by 1.

Card 9225.9.1concept
Question

Derivative of a constant?

Answer

0 — a constant graph is a flat horizontal line, so its gradient is 0.

Card 9235.9.1formula
Question

d/dx(sin x) and d/dx(cos x)?

Answer

sin x → cos x; cos x → −sin x (mind the minus). x must be in radians.

Card 9245.9.1formula
Question

d/dx(eˣ)?

Answer

eˣ — the exponential function is its own derivative.

Card 9255.9.1formula
Question

d/dx(ln x)?

Answer

1/x.

Card 9265.9.1concept
Question

How do you differentiate √x?

Answer

Rewrite as x^(1/2); then it becomes ½x^(−1/2) = 1/(2√x).

Card 9275.9.1concept
Question

How do you find the gradient of f at x = a?

Answer

Compute f′(x), then substitute: gradient = f′(a).

Card 9285.9.1formula
Question

Equation of the tangent at x = a?

Answer

y − f(a) = f′(a)(x − a), where f′(a) is the gradient and (a, f(a)) is the point.

Card 9295.9.2formula
Question

State the chain rule.

Answer

dy/dx = dy/du · du/dx — differentiate the outer function, then multiply by the derivative of the inside.

Card 9305.9.2formula
Question

d/dx of e^{kx}?

Answer

k·e^{kx} (chain rule: the k is the derivative of the inside kx).

Card 9315.9.2formula
Question

d/dx of (ax + b)ⁿ?

Answer

n·a·(ax + b)^(n−1) — power rule on the outside, times a (the inside derivative).

Card 9325.9.2formula
Question

State the product rule.

Answer

(uv)′ = u′v + uv′ — first times derivative of second, plus second times derivative of first.

Card 9335.9.2formula
Question

State the quotient rule.

Answer

(u/v)′ = (u′v − uv′)/v² — mind the minus and the order u′v − uv′.

Card 9345.9.2concept
Question

How do you decide which rule to use?

Answer

Fraction → quotient; two factors multiplied → product; a function inside a function → chain.

Card 9355.9.2concept
Question

Differentiate y = x·eˣ.

Answer

Product rule: (1)eˣ + x·eˣ = eˣ(1 + x).

Card 9365.9.2formula
Question

d/dx of sin(3x)?

Answer

3cos(3x) (chain rule: derivative of the inside 3x is 3).

Card 9375.9.3formula
Question

Chain rule for related rates?

Answer

dy/dt = (dy/dx)(dx/dt) — linked quantities have linked rates.

Card 9385.9.3formula
Question

Circle: how does area rate link to radius rate?

Answer

A = πr² ⇒ dA/dt = 2πr · dr/dt.

Card 9395.9.3formula
Question

Sphere: how does volume rate link to radius rate?

Answer

V = (4/3)πr³ ⇒ dV/dt = 4πr² · dr/dt.

Card 9405.9.3concept
Question

The 4-step related-rates recipe?

Answer

Write the link → differentiate it → apply the chain rule with the known rate → substitute the value and solve.

Card 9415.9.3concept
Question

When do you substitute the given value (e.g. r = 5)?

Answer

LAST — after differentiating. Substituting early removes the variable you need to differentiate.

Card 9425.9.3concept
Question

A balloon's volume grows at 100 cm³/s; find dr/dt at r = 5.

Answer

100 = 4π(25)dr/dt ⇒ dr/dt = 1/π ≈ 0.318 cm/s.

Card 9435.9.3concept
Question

What does a NEGATIVE rate mean in a related-rates problem?

Answer

The quantity is decreasing (e.g. melting, draining) — keep the minus sign.

Card 9445.9.3concept
Question

If dr/dt = 0 at an instant, what is dA/dt for A = πr²?

Answer

dA/dt = 2πr·dr/dt = 0 — the area is momentarily not changing.

Track your progress with spaced repetition

Sign up free to get personalised review schedules and see exactly which cards you need to practice most.

Get Started Free