Yahoo Answers is shutting down on 4 May 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Lv 781,256 points

Pope

Top contributor
Favourite answers27%
Answers15,266

After years of my derisive comments about voting on mathematics answers, the popular vote has been abolished. Now the prize can be fairly bestowed by the asker, who often has not the least interest in the concept, but likes a good bottom line. In the beginning, there was the answer key.

Top contributor in

  • Attachment image

    Parabola Properties?

    Here is one that was left hanging a few days ago. The parabola below has vertex V and focus F. Points A and P lie on the axis. Tangents AQ and PQ meet at Q.

    As though it were common knowledge, I stated that FQ was the geometric mean of FA and FP. When challenged on that, I could not remember where I had learned it, and I did not find it in any of my resources. I have since proved it. That is what this challenge is.

    Prove: FQ² = (FA)(FP)

    I would prefer a deductive geometry proof, but I suppose an analytic proof would be acceptable if it is generalized.

    1 AnswerMathematics3 months ago
  • Attachment image

    Domain of composite function?

    Let functions f and g be defined by their graphs, a ray in both cases.

    h(x) = f[g(x)]

    What is the domain of the composite function h?

    1 AnswerMathematics8 months ago
  • Attachment image

    Area of region bounded by three parabolas?

    These three parabolas were correct responses to an earlier question.

    https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20190...

    x² - 40x - 16y + 144 = 0

    9x² + 24xy + 16y² - 360x - 288y + 1296 = 0

    9x² - 24xy + 16y² - 360x - 288y + 1296 = 0

    The points A(0, 9), B(4, 0), and C(36, 0) lie on all three curves. What is the area of the region on the interior of all three parabolas? Exact answers only, please.

    2 AnswersMathematics2 years ago
  • Two parabolas having the same intercepts?

    In the x-y plane, two distinct parabolas share these same axis intercepts.

    Exactly two x-intercepts: (4, 0), (36,0)

    Exactly one y-intercept: (0, 9)

    Derive the equations of both parabolas.

    Do be careful. Not all parabolas have vertical axes.

    2 AnswersMathematics2 years ago
  • Nearest point on a hyperbola?

    Hyperbola: 2x² - 7y² + 20 = 0

    Point: (5, 0)

    Find the point(s) on the hyperbola nearest the given point.

    2 AnswersMathematics3 years ago
  • Simplify the algebraic expression.?

    √(9xy²z³)

    Few people seem to get these. On similar problems incorrect answers tend to prevail.

    5 AnswersMathematics5 years ago
  • General term of a sequence?

    These are the first four terms of a sequence:

    1, 10, 28, 82

    Find a general nth term that fits the sequence.

    5 AnswersMathematics7 years ago
  • Attachment image

    Construct a triangle quadrisection?

    Given any arbitrary triangle, dissect it into four triangles of equal area, using in a pattern like that shown here. Three of them share a side with the given triangle, and the remaining one does not touch any of the given sides.

    This must be a compass and straightedge construction. Please do not offer answers with measurements or approximation algorithms.

    1 AnswerMathematics7 years ago
  • Family of parabolas through three points?

    I saw this question about a week ago. We were asked to derive the equation for the parabola through these three points in the Cartesian plane:

    (1, 11), (0, 6), (2, 18)

    My problem with the question is that there is more than one parabola fitting those three points. In fact, there are infinitely many. Everyone else was assuming a vertical axis, which is probably what the asker intended, but that condition was not stated. So what about the others?

    Using a single variable parameter, derive an equation representing the family of parabolas passing through the three given points.

    Please read it carefully. The objective is not a single parabola, but rather a family of parabolas. I asked this same question two days ago, but was compelled to delete it because nobody was addressing the question.

    Mathematics9 years ago
  • Focus reflections in a conic?

    Point F is a focus of an ellipse. Point P is the image of F when it is reflected on a line that is tangent to the ellipse. What is the locus of P as F is reflected on all tangent lines? Give a detailed description please.

    Answer the same question again for the cases of a parabola and a hyperbola.

    1 AnswerMathematics1 decade ago
  • Chords bisected by a point?

    Curve S and point P are defined below.

    S: 21x² + y² - 168x + 40y - 734 = 0

    P(7, -29)

    How many chords of S are bisected by point P? Derive the equations of those chords.

    3 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago
  • Locus of centers of orthogonal spheres?

    Two spheres are given:

    x² + y² + z² + 14x − 4y − 147 = 0

    x² + y² + z² + 4x − 28y - 168z + 6631 = 0

    Write a single equation representing the locus of centers of spheres that are orthogonal to both of the given spheres.

    2 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago
  • Can you keep this proof on the students' level?

    This is something that came from an exercise book. Some students got stuck on this advanced problem. I can do the proof, but for sake of the students, I would like to find a simpler and shorter way. They have strong algebra skills, and they are getting good with elementary trigonometry identities, but they have had no double angle formulas and no calculus at all.

    This is what they have proved so far:

    sinθcosθ = k

    (sinθ + cosθ)² = 1 + 2k

    (sinθ - cosθ)² = 1 - 2k

    Now prove this inequality:

    -1/2 ≤ k ≤ 1/2

    2 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago
  • What is the radius of these spheres?

    Begin with one red sphere of unit radius. On its surface evenly distribute twenty congruent blue spheres. Each of the blue spheres is externally tangent to the red sphere and to exactly three of the other blue spheres. What is the radius of a blue sphere?

    1 AnswerMathematics1 decade ago
  • More reflections in an ellipse?

    This is a follow-up to a question that was answered quite well a few days ago:

    http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Atjux...

    From a point on an ellipse, a point particle is projected across the interior, tracing a chord. At the point where it intersects the ellipse it rebounds back across the interior again, subject to the reflective properties of an ellipse. It then traces another chord and rebounds again. This continues indefinitely. The first chord does not go through either focus.

    The path may or may not retrace the first chord. Suppose that it does not. Describe the pattern traced by the path.

    1 AnswerMathematics1 decade ago
  • Locus of solutions to an equation?

    Describe in detail the locus of points in the x-y plane satisfying this equation:

    (x² + y² - 14x + 8y + 65)(7x² + 16xy - 15y² - 7x + 5y) = 0

    3 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago
  • Reflections in an ellipse?

    A ray is projected from a focus of an ellipse and reflected at the point where it intersects the ellipse. The path of the reflection goes through the other focus. This reflective property applies to all ellipses. But what happens after that? Continuing through the focus and onto the ellipse, it is reflected again and returns to the first focus, and so on.

    In one trivial case, the first ray is coincident with the major axis, and the path is restricted to that axis. Are there any other cases in which the path would retrace itself? Does the path approach a stable orbit?

    1 AnswerMathematics1 decade ago
  • One saddle, one minimum, and one maximum?

    I received this from my nephew recently. I suppose we can forgo the sketching component.

    Can a differentiable function f(x,y) of two variables have on the plane exactly three critical points, one saddle, one local minimum, and one local maximum? If no, explain why, if yes, give an example and sketch a graph.

    1 AnswerMathematics1 decade ago
  • Are these experiments equivalent?

    A mathematics teacher, wishing to get caught up on some paperwork, gives his students a tedious activity of questionable educational merit. The students are paired off. Each team is given a fair cubic gaming die. They are instructed to roll the die 500 times and record the number of sixes.

    Looking up from his work, the teacher notices that one team is not following his instructions to the letter. One student is rolling the die on a glass-top table and counting the sixes. The other student is sitting under the table and counting the sixes that appear on the bottom. The students insist that their procedure is equivalent to the one that was assigned. The probability of a six on bottom is equal to the probability of a six on top. This way, they argue, they can roll the die only 250 times and still record 500 trials.

    Are the students in fact conducting an equivalent experiment? Let X be the number of sixes recorded the usual way in 500 rolls. Let Y be the number of sixes recorded in 250 rolls using the modified procedure. Do X and Y have the same distribution?

    2 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago
  • Locus of a circle center?

    I put this up a couple of weeks ago, but received no correct answers. Can we try again?

    Two fixed, intersecting circles have unequal radii. A variable circle is tangent to both of the fixed circles. Describe the locus of the center of the variable circle.

    3 AnswersMathematics1 decade ago