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A. H. 3a6oeB
A. C. HBaHOB
JJ. O. KaJIHHHHeHKO
H B . IIIojioxob
Ha amjiuucKOM siaune
The authors
5
Contents
Preface 5
List of Designations Accepted in the g
Book 8g 2<D *.2o
£
(c) z2+ 3 1 . 1 2
\W z + 3 —2i; (d) x —a x —1 (x—a) (,x —1)
Solve the following inequalities:
w> W ^ > ‘i
(0 ^ - > - 1 .
2* 19
4. (a) x—l >0;
a+ 3
1 sC 1
(b ) 2a— 3 2a + 5 •
5. (a)
m K 4 T < f c F 3 < 0'
6. (a) I* + 2 | | *—22 '| "H 2a-
x2—4 a + 4 , | a:—2 |
(c ) "J^6a; + 9 + | a -3 |
12 < 0 ;
2 (*+l)
(d) * - 2 ( 1 — i ) < - 3a
7. (a) y = - | ; (b) 0 = - 4 ;
(®) y = - 2 + ^ ; (d) y = T
1 1
8. (a) 0 = a —3 I ’ W ^ I2a+ l
9* (a) y —2 + — (b) 0 = 1
1
(c) 0 = z + l 2 ; (d) 0 = - a —2
a —1
10. (a) y = (b) 0 a+ l '
. . 2a—2 x+2
(c) y z+ 3 (d) 0 = 3 —x
1
11. (a) 0 2 - | * | ; (b) 0 i* -ii-i■
I* -4 | 1—x
12. (a) 0 a + 2 ; (b) 0 I* + 3 I
a —1 | 1 * 1 -2
13. (a) 0 | a | - 1 ; (b) 0 I *+ 3 |
a —1 |a+l | 1.
14. (a) 0 X—1 | 1 x - \-l X
*2-9
x+3 ■x +1 —
(b) 0 = - | .-
X— 1
15. Find the derivative of the function (a) y = — \
<*> » = - r f r ; W ^ t E s t -
16. At the indicated point, find the value of the deriva-
tive of the function (a) y = — i x0=-l;
(«) * = - w - i r b i . -4 )-
19. On the hyperbola y = X i^~|—
41 » find the point M at
which the tangent to th at hyperbola (a) is parallel to
the straight line y = 2a; + 1; (b) is perpendicular to
the straight line y = — l . x — 3.
O
20. Show that the tangents drawn to the hyperbola y =
x —4 i
= jn 2 points of its intersection with the axes
of coordinates are parallel to each other.
21. Set up an equation of the tangent to the hyperbola
x -1 9
y = * which passes through the origin of coor
dinates.
21
22. Prove that the function y = is strictly mono
tonic on any interval (a^; a:2), provided th at ad ^ be,
c =^= 0, a; = —die $ (a^; a:2).
23. Find the greatest and the least value of the function
(a) y = (x — 3)/(x + 1) on the interval [0; 2];
(b) y = (2x + l)/(a: — 2) on the interval [—1; 1].
24. The function y = klx, & > 0 is specified on the interval
Ixi, x 2]. Prove that there is a point x 0 6 x 2) such
that y (x2) — y (#i) = J /' (a:0) {x2 — %i)- Find the coor
dinates of the point x 0>
27. (a) x x —2 x —2
, + i -1 X —2 ’
X 2— X+ l I ^ 2 -— 8 x - | - 1 \ 9 rr
1
(d ) X— 1 x — 3 Ax — 8 ’
x 3 — 2x2 + 5x + 2 ~> 1 •
(e ) a;2 + 3 * + 2
1 1 1 , 1
(f) I I > o.
X 45 1 x — 7 1 a: — 5 1 x + 1
1 . 1
28. (a) x 2 + x ^ 2x24 2 a : 4 3 ’
4 1
(b) 4 A 4 <4 -
4x —17 lOx —13 ^ 8x — 30 5 x -A
(c ) x —4 2x —3 > 2x — 7 h x — i
. 5 o I 4;r2 < 5 .
29. (a) x2- (x4 1 )2 < 4 ! (b) x 4 (ar_ 2)2
128
»• <*> 4
<a > ^ 15
(b) * 3-
(« 4 )
24
j+ 6 / x —4 \2 . x — 6 / z + 9 \2 2a:2+ 72
31. a:—6 I a:+4 / ' x + 6 \ £ —9 / a:2—36
32. \x3- x \ ^ x . 33. |x + 4t | _ 2 > l * - l | .
34. Find the derivative of the function (a) z/ = x3— 6x2 + 1;
(b ) y = — a:34--|-a: — 2; (c) y = xk — 6a: + 3;
25
37. On the curve y = x* — 3x + 2, find the points at
which the tangent is parallel to the straight line y = 3x.
38. At which point is the tangent to the graph of the func
tion / (x) = ^ x z — — 9a: + 8 parallel to the bisec
tor of the first and the third quadrant?
39. At which points of the curve y = xs + x — 2 is the
tangent to it parallel to the line y = 4 r + 5?
40. Find a point on the curve y = x 2 (x — 2)2 at which the
tangent to it is parallel to the line y = 24a: — 1.
41. Find a point on the curve y = 1/(1 + x2) at which the
tangent is parallel to the abscissa axis.
42. Show that any tangent to the curve y = xh + 8a: + 1
makes an acute angle w ith the a:-axis.
Find the critical points of the following functions:
43. (a) y = 2 * » --|-* * + * - | / r3;
(b) y = x3- 3 ^ 3 * 2 + 3 ^ 9 * - 3 / 3 ;
(c) y = 3*3— x2+ 5* + 0.7; (d) i/ = (* + 2)2(3* — 1);
(e) y = x 3+ 3\x\; (f) y = \ x 3\ — 9*.
44. (a) z/ = *4 + 8*2 — 6 4 * + 1; (b) y = 3a:4+ 16*3 + 6*2—
— 72*—3; (c) i/ = *4 + 6*2+ 5; (d) y = — xi -j- 4 |* |;
(e) y — «* + 8 |a5»|.
45. (a) y = ^ ~ — | * 3- 3 ( * + l ) ; (b) y = 0.6a:5-1 3 * * +
(c) y = * » - 2 0 * * - H ; (d) „ = - £ ^ | + | - .
47. Find the intervals of the monotone increase of the
function (a) y = x3— 5x2 -f- 3a:— 11; (b) y = — a:3 +
+ 6*2—9* + 5; (c) = 0.25*4+ *2 — 6; (d) y = -*+^{ ;
. v 1 —x-\-x2
(e) y — 1+*+** •
26
48. Determine the points of extremum of the function
(a) y = 3? + 3x2 — 45a: + 1; (b) y = — 2a:2 +
+ 4x — 3; (c) y = | 3a: — 1 | — a?; (d) y =
= (x - l)8 (x + 2); (e) y = (x + 3)2 (* - 4)2;
(f) v = 2* * + ± ;
49. Find the absolute value of the difference between the
extrema of the function
y = x3 + 3z2 — 3x + 1.
50. Find the least and the greatest value of the function
on the indicated intervals
(a) y = x3 + 9a; — 3 on the interval [—1; 0];
(b) y = §x — x3 on the interval [—2; 1];
(c) y — (x + 2)3 (x — 1) on the interval [—1; 2];
(d) y = xb — 5,r4 + 5.z3 + 4 on the interval [—1; 2];
(e) y = X —J
—X “I- i
on the interval [—2; —1],
57- y = - r h ~ - M- 0 - i c t -
59. £t = xz + - ^ - . 60. y = .
3x —y = 0, x — 2y = 0,
1. (b) {
— x + y = 0; 2x — 4y = 0;
0-x — 0 'i/ = 0, | 0 .* + y = 0 t
(d )
| 0-x —0-y = 0;
27
| 0-a; + 0 - i / = — 1,
(e ) {
(G) 1 0 .* + 0 .y = 2.
2. (a)
(c )
,, M I 1*1 + if = 4, / V (* + y)2= 5»
a I * 4 -3 |y| = 6 ; I V (x—y)2 = 1.
13. Find x 6 N and y 6 N satisfying the equation 23x +
+ 31 y = 1000.
14. On the plane xOy, indicate the points satisfying the
inequality (a) | * — y | < 1; (b) | x + y | > 2;
(c) I * | — | y | > 1; (d)| x | + | y | < 3;
(e) I * — 1 | + | y + 1 | > 2; (f) | x + y \ +
+ | * — y | < 2.
15. On the plane xOy, indicate the points satisfying the
system of inequalities
3y < 5,
y + 2 * < 11,
Ay + x > 9.
Find all integral values of x and y satisfying this system.
29
16. At what a £ |R does the point (a; a2) lie in the interior
of the triangle formed at the intersection of the lines
y = x + 1, y = 3 — x, y = — 2x?
Solve the following systems of equations:
00
i 00
©
17. r
1
x+
to
II
II II II
" i |
2 x — i/ + 3z = 9,
-» +
I — 3x + 4p-f-2z = 11.
Ax — 3y — 6z =
19. ( 2x "f" 3y “)- z — 1 = 0,
| X —1 y+ 1 z
1I l -2 6*
20. ,r *+2 y —1 2—3
1 —2 3 2 »
1I x -\-2y —-2z + 6 = 0.
21. Given the system of equations
/ T ^ T y + T z = 61*
I x + y + z = 79.
(a) Find the value of the sum — y + j ; (b) among all
natural solutions of the system, find the solution for
which x assumes the greatest value.
22. The inequalities / (—1) < 1, / (1) > —1, / (3) < —4
are known to be satisfied for a certain function / (x) =
= ax2 + bx -f- c, a =/= 0. Determine the sign of the
coefficient a.
23. Represent the set {(x; y, z) | | x \ + \ y | + | z \ ^ 1}
graphically and name the figure you have obtained.
O
(d) I|
x2 + 9y2+ 6xy —6x —
II
o
1I
x 30 - 2y»
y*
2. (a) j\
x + y = 5, (b) 1 i - x2+ y2=
II
I[
xy = 6; 1 xy == - 4 ; I x+ y=
(d) f 4 - + -V = 13, <e> (*• + *»= 7,
1 x* y* 7
< 1 x + y = 1;
{ x y
[ x4+ y4= 17, (g) | a;5+ y5= 275,
(f) J
11 x + y = 3; l a :+ y = 3;
CO
CO
CO
(h)
II
1
•► JS
<*ss*
II
\f(*+ »-l)-9i I f + |= 4 .
31
7. (a) | yz- \ x y \ + 2 = 0, (b) j |xy —2| = 6 —x2,
I 8 - x 2 = (x + 2y)z; 1 2 + 3yz = 2xy.
8. Find all pairs of numbers x and y for which the condi
tions x2 — 2xy + 12 = 0, x2 + 4y2 ^ 60 and x £ Z
are simultaneously fulfilled.
9. Find natural solutions of the system
f x = y -\- 2,
< x y ^ 17,
I ( y + l) /( x + 2) < l / 2.
10. Find all values of a for which the set
{(x; y) | x 2 + y2 + 2x < 1}
fl {(x; y) | x — y + a > 0}
contains only one point. Find that point.
11. Solve the equation (a) (x — l) 2 + (y + 5)2 = 0;
(b) x2 + yz — 2x + 6y + 10 = 0;
(c) (x + y — a)2 + (y — l) 2 + (x + 3)2 = 0.
Solve the following systems of equations:
12. (a) f x-\-2y — z = 5, (b) ( 2u + v-\-w = Q,
3x—4p + z = l, ^ 3u + 2n + u>= 9,
x2 + y2 + z2 = 6; 3u3+ 2v3 + w3 = 27.
13. ( x + y + z = 2, 14. ( xy + x + i / = 7,
xy + yz + zx = —5, 1 l/z + y + z = —3,
x2 + y2 —z2 = 12. I xz + £ + z = —5.
15. ( x2 —yz ~ 14, 16. a:2+ xy + yz = 3,
yz — xz = 28, J/2 + J/z + z2 = 7,
z2— xy = —14. z2+ zx + x2 = 19.
17. f xp + a:z = 8, 18. 5xp/(x + p) = 1,
yz-\-xy = 9, 7yzl{y + z) = 1,
xz -\-yz= — 7. 6xz = x + z.
19. f 4xz + p 2+ 2 z 2 = —3, 20. r y3 = 9xz— 27a;+ 27,
4xz + x2+ 2z2= 1, z3 — %yz — 27p + 27,
8yz + y2+ 2z2 = l. x3 = 9z2 — 27z + 27.
32
21. Find all triples of the integers (x\ y; z) for which the
relation 5x2 + y2 + 3z2 — 2yz = 30 is satisfied.
22. Hatch the set of points of the coordinate plane defined
by the system of inequalities
(a) | y 2 z < 0 , (b) j s 2 + J /< 0,
i x2 + y2— 5 ^ 0 ; 1 2x2 + y — 1 ^ 0 .
23. Represent on the plane the set of points {x\ y) whose
coordinates satisfy the systems of inequalities
(a) ( 2 j/> x 2, (b) r y + a:2s^0,
i — 2x* + 3x; J y — 2z + 3 > 0 ,
I y + l< 0 ;
(°) | x2+ y2> 1,
I *2+ y2< 1 6 .
Chapter 2
(e) V \ x \ + \ —Y |x| = a ;
(f) K x2+ 5* + 3 - / x2 + 5x - 2 = 1.
6. (a) / 2 F f 3 - / J + l = l;
(b) /2 i H ^ 3 + / J + l = 5;
(c) / 2 * ^ 3 + V S + l = 4;
(d) y x + 4 + y 2 ^ T 6 = 7;
(e) y 2 * = 4 - V 5 + 5 = l;
(f) y 5 j + 7 - y 2 ^ + 3 = ] /3 J + 4 ;
(g) "|/x2+ x -t-4 + y x 2+ x + l = y 2 x 2 + 2x4-9;
(h) Y x2 — 9x + 24—y 6 x 2— 59x + 149= |5 —x |.
7. (a) x + 1 2 l / x —64 = 0;
(c) ( x - 3 ) 2 + 3 x - 2 2 = / x 2—3 x + 7 ;
(d) 2x2 + 3x —5 ]A2x2+ 3 x + 9 + 3 = 0;
(e) x / x 2 + 1 5 - 2 = f i ^ x 2+ 1 5 ;
» /l± r - /H r = T ^
fe) / S :+ 2 / I S := 3i
( h ) ^ + - i 7 ! = i n = 2;
(i) 4a:2 + 12a:Y i - \ - x = 27 (1 + a:).
8. 7 x + Y x — 3 = a.
9. Find the domain and the range of the function (a) y =
= ] / 2 — s + V^l + s; (b) y = Y ~ —4a:2+ 4a;+ 3.
34
Solve the following equations:
10. £ / x ^ 2 + ^ 4 ^ x = 2.
11. l^ x 2 + a x — 2a —x + 1.
12. "|/r2x— 1 — x-\-a = 0.
13. V a2 —x / x 2+ a2= a —x.
14. l^ x —Y ^x — a = a.
15. Va: + y < ? + 2 a —3
- { - V x - \ - a - \ - 2 — 2a + 2a2— a3 = a ) f 1 —a:.
Solve the following inequalities:
16. ( x - 1) / x 2~ x - 2 > 0 . 17. } / - £ ^ - > - 1 .
18. 1 ^ 4 ^ 2+ J jL > 0 .
19. ( l _ a ) V 2 * - h l < 1.
20. l / ^ T i > / 3 ^ x . 21. l / a : 4 - 2 > / x - a .
22. (a) y 24 — lOx > 3 — 4x;
(b )x > y i-x ; (c) x > 1 ^ 2 4 —5x;
(0) / 4 — T < T -T -
(e)
23. (a) | / x 2+ x —12 < x ;
(b) 1 —/ 1 3 - f 3x2s^2x;
(c) V^x2+ x > - l —2x; (d) 4 —x < V x 2— 2x.
24. / ^ + 3 > / ^ l + K ^ 2 .
25. (a) - ^ = 1 ------< 4 ;
(b) 2 - / i + - 3 1
x —1 o
(c) l/^x + 2 — 1 ^ 5 x > 4 x — 2 ;
(d) Y x + l + l < 4 x 2 + l/3 x .
3* 35
26. j f o + 2 * — ’ < | .
X
27. 2(a: + l/a :2 + 4a: + 3 ) < 3 ( ) / a : + l + / x + 3 — 2).
28. At what values^of p £ Z is the function f(x) = y ^ x v
n 6 N, even?
29. Is there a constant number T, T =^=0, such that the
equality / (x) = / (x 71) is satisfied for the function
/(* )= } /^ 1 ?
30. Find the derivative of the function (derive formulas
using the definition of the derivative) (a) y = Y z ;
(b) y = Sy Sx ; (c) y = t / x .
31. Find the derivative of the function
(a) p = ] /x — l / |/ x ; (b) y = x * Y * \
(c) y = Y x (x3~ 1^*4-1);
(d) j/ = (l + / i j ( l f l / 2 S ) ( l + / 3 S ) ;
(e) y = (i + V Z ) / ( i + V t e ) i
(f) y = Y I —*2; (g) p = ( l —2a:1/2)4;
(h) y = V x - \ - Y x -
32. At the indicated point M (x 0; i/0)» calculate the value
of the derivative of the function (a) y — (x2 + x + 2)3/2,
M (1; 8); (b) y = Y ( x + ! ) / ( * - ! ) , ^ (2; / 3 ) ;
(c) j = f ( l - I ‘)/(l + *2), Af (0; 1).
33. At the indicated point P (x0; z/0), set up an equation
of the tangent to the curve
(a) y (x) = Y x >P (4^2),
(b) y{x) = x - 2 V ^ P (1; - 1 ) ;
(e) y = - ^ — Y * V x + - Y x — 3 V * + l -
38. Prove that the inequality 2 jAa: > 3 — 1/a: is satisfied
for all x 6 (1; oo).
39. On the indicated intervals, find the greatest and the
least value of the function
(a) f(x) = 1 A 0 0 - z 2 , x £ [ — 6; 8];
(b) f(x) = x + 2 Y x , * 6 [0 ; 4];
(c) / (x) = 3/( x z - 2 a :) 2 , a: 6 [0; 3].
40. Find the points of extremum, as well as the greatest
and the least value of the function / (x) = (x — t) 2 X
X Y x 2 — 2a: + 3 on the interval [0; 3].
41. Investigate the behaviour of the function (a) y =
= x Y %— x2; (b) y = x2 — x and construct its
graph using its derivative.
37
2.2. Systems of Irrational Equations and Inequalities
Solve the following systems of equations:
1. (a) 7 4 5
V x —7 /y + 6 3 9
5 3 13 .
V X—7 /y + 6 ~ 6 ’
(b) 4 1
Y * + v — V * —y V x - y - - V x+y = 1,
■? 1 4 __9_
. Yx+y — “ 4
1
V x+ y -
1 «
2. (a) , 2x —1
\1 lV /
*+y ~ 5 ,
+
2x —i
1[ x = y + 1;1
(b) l i
x+ y io
V x-y 3
xy — 2x — 2y = 2.
3. 12
at+ » + Y i ^ j x —y
xy = 15.
'*• j y V x Zjr y 2— 2ay — 3 = 0,
\ x y x z + y2 = 2ax.
5. At what values of a does the following system of equa
tions possess a unique solution:
( Vy = vV*,
I y = a x + 1?
6. At what values of a is the following system of equations
consistent:
V x z + 2xy + y* + Y x* — 2xy + y2 = 4,
{ Y x2 + y2 = a?
7. Solve the following system of inequalities:
Y~4 — 3x ^ x ,
{ y x-\-Y x — 1 < 5 .
38
Find the graphical solutions ot the following inequalities
and systems of inequalities:
8. Y x — y ^ V x + y. 9. 1 + ]f x ^ y .
10. ( y -
1 y > 2\ x \.
2.3. An Exponential and a Logarithmic Function,
Exponential and Logarithmic Equations,
Systems of Equations, and Inequalities
(i) a V ^ - b VT^ ~ a.
5. Find (a) log30 8, if log30 3 = c, log30 5 = d;
(b) log9 40, if log 15 = c, log20 50 = d;
(c) log (0.175)4, if log 196 = c, log 56 = d.
6. Prove that if a = log12 18, b = log24 54, then
ab + 5 (a - 6) = 1.
7. W ithout resorting to tables, calculate
log3 24 log 2 192
log,« 2 logls 2 •
39
8. Prove that
log„ (n + 1) > logn+1 (n + 2),
for any natural n > 1.
9. Prove (without resort to tables) th at log4 9 > log9 25.
Solve the following equations:
10. (a) 3*-* = 7; (b) 313*"4' = 92*"2;
(c) 7*+2— L . 7*+i — 1 4 .7*-i -f 2 • 7* = 48;
X+5 X+17
(d) 22*-3 = 45c2-35C“ 1; (e) 32*~7 = 0 .2 5 -1 2 8 *~3 ;
(I) =
(«> 21^ = -± -;
(h) K r ‘+‘0'> r ‘ “ = - i - ;
(i) 73* _|_ 9.5** = 5** -f 9 •7**;
X+— 3C+—
(j) 9 * - 2 2= 2 2 — 32*"1;
(k) 1 / 2* V 4* (0.125)1/5C= 4 $ /2 ;
(l) 4^/(0.125)*-3 = 21/’*TT;
( 1) =
— 2 log2 (x + -lr) = 0 .
(e) log2 ( - J r - 4) = x - 2 ;
log x + 5
26. (a) (x + l) log(*+1) = 100 (x + 1); (b) x 3 = 1 0 5+log*;
(c) 3logI = 5 4 - i log3; (d) log2 (9 — 2*) = 10log (3“ 3C).
27. \ x — l | log2*~logx* _ |x — i p
28. (3**-7-2*+3.9 _ 9 y z ) log (7 — x) = 0.
35. (a)
{ _1_ tj* log, 2+1/ log, 2-2 _J_3* log. 2—1/ log, 2-2 _
44
| 2 (logy x 4- log* y) = 5,
I xy = 8;
| log, y + log„ *==2.5,
1 \ * + y = a2+ o.
xzly + y2/x = 28,
logsx lo g ! y = 1.5.
Vrg - V ’2y = y r1 2 - / 8 .
a:4-y = 44-V"*/24- 2,
log * — 2 log 2 = log (14- 0.5y).
i (lo g i y ) = 1.
2
45
47. (a) ]og^(2x* + 5 x + l ) < 6 ;
5
(b) log! (x2 + 2x) > 0;
3
(c) log! (x2— 4x + 6 ) < — 2;
(d) l o g i ~ < l ;
3 ~
(c) y 9 * + 3 * - 2 > 9 - 3 * .
. , 3*+6
logl Io82-JI+2"
55. (a) logl/3(log4 (*2—5)) > 0; (b) 0.3 3 > 1.
56. (a) log4/3(K * + 3 —* ) > 0 ;
(b) logi/2 { V 5 —* — * + 1) > —3.
47
57. (a) a;iog,jc-2> (fy ^log^-aiogs+ i > 1000;
5 —loga * 1 + log0 *
< 1 , 0 < a < 1;
31og0 a : + 6 _a ,
(c) l o g |* + 2
(d) loga ( l - 8 o “* ) > 2 ( l - * ) .
59. (a) log*_3(x —1 ) < 2 ; (b) log* (* + 2) > 2.
60. (a) log2* (*2—5* + 6) < ; 1; (b) log*^ (*a —x) < 1;
(c) logsoe+s (9xa + 8 x + 2) > 2; (d) log2x+4(a:2 + l ) < l ;
i X~ ^ ^1°S4 (*+^) ’
l0g4^+ 2
48
Solve the following systems of inequalities:
V ( x — 8) (2 — x) > 0
2*~3— 31 > 0 ;
/lo g ! X— 31og2 x + 2 Q
(b )
logs (-|-(log 3 5 - l ) j
, i-fa -2 > 0 .
/ J _ \8 + lo g a * / ! .lo g s *
68. I 81 / > I 3I
0 < £ < 1.
69. Which of the functions given below are even and
which are odd?
ax -\-a r x
(a) y = 2-*‘; (b) y- (c ) y
, \ ** + l
(d ) y- ax + a~x (e) V = 4rLf,
(f) (e) y = l n ! 4 - ;
(h) y = log2 (a: -|-|/a:a + 1).
70. Represent the function y = 3* as the sum of an even
and an odd function.
71. Given the function y = (l/2)sinx. Find the least posi
tive period of that function. Is the function odd?
72. Find the inverse of .the function y = (ex — e~x)l2.
Construct the graphs of the following equations:
73. y = 3-W. 74. y = log2 (1 - x).
75. y = | log2 (1 — x) |. 76. y = log2 (2 — x)2.
77. = 78. y — xlogx2.
* \nx *
79. y = e'lnxK 80. y — log2 (x* — 2x).
81. y — log21 |. 82. j/ = log2sina:.
94. Find the values of a and b for which the function / (#) =
= a In x + bx2 + x + 2 possesses extrema at the points
xx = 1 and x 2 = 2.
95. In the indicated intervals, find the greatest and the
least value of the function (a) y = e~x (x2 + x — 5),
* € [ —4; 41; (b) y = * , * € [ —1; 2];
(c) y = 2-33* - 4-32x + 2-3*, a: 6 I—1; 11;
(d) y = | x2 + 2x — 3 | + 1.5 In x, x 6 [1/2; 4].
96. At what value of x does the expression 2X2 — 1 +
+ 2/(2*2 + 2) assume the least value?
97. Solve the inequality / ' (x) < g' (x ), if
(a) / (s) = z + 3 In (x — 2), g (x) = £ + 5 In (x — 1);
(b) / (;r) = e2x — 3a:, g (x) = 5 (e* — £ + 3).
98. Prove that the inequality (a) ex >> 1 + x;
(b) x > In (1 + x) is valid for all x 6 (0; oo).
Investigate the behaviours of the following functions with
the aid of their derivatives and construct their graphs:
99. y = xe~x. 100. y = In (x2 + 1).
f "|Ax = ta n a , f x = Y 1 — sin a ,
(c) m . a , a
I Y y = sec a; j/ = sm-2- + c o s^ -.
= - |- ta n 2 * ; ( b ) » = 5 c o t - |- ; (c) I / = ~ ; (d) V = •
is even.
8. Find the least positive period of the function
(a) y = sin 3a;; (b) y = tan 2x + 2 sin 3a:; (c) y — cos ;
(d) y = cos2 a:; (e) y = sin (cos x ) ; (f) y = cos (sin a;)
/ \ 3 — s .i n2y a;.
(g) y = cos-jX
55
14. (a) y = tan 3#; (b) y =-- — tan ;
^ ( t " ’ 2) ; y = cos2;r» A {t * t ) ;
(c) y = tan 2x, A (-g-; l ) .
19. Find the greatest and the least value of the function
y ~ sin2 x — 20 cos x + 1.
56
2.6. Inverse Trigonometric Functions
Find the domains of definition of the following functions:
1. (a) y = arcsin (1 —x)\ (b) y = arccos ^2 — ;
2x
(c) y = arcsin (2x + x 2); (d) y = arcco s-j a ;
(e) y = arcsin (cosx); (f) y = arccos (sin2a:).
2. (a) arctan (1— x2)\ (b) z/ = arccot Y x \
(c) y = arctan (log2;r); (d) y = arccot (ex + e”x).
3. Find the range of the function (a) i/ = arcsin Y
(b) y = arccos ( --- — ) ; (c) y = arctan ;
60
2.7. Trigonometric Equations and Systems of Equations
Solve the following equations:
(e) s in ] / x — —1.
2. (a) cosa; = 0; (b) cos [Zx— = — 1;
z \ . „ X . X 1
(c) sin4y — cos4 y = y ;
/ i\ Jl . JT • 3X
(d) cos y cos a; — sm — sin z = — ;
(e) cosa:2= l .
3. 2 cos |s in x — 1 3 + -— •) J = ]^3.
4. Find all values of the parameter a for which the equa
tion cos x — (a — 1.5)/(2 — 0.5a) has a solution.
5. Find the critical points of the function (a) y =
= 3 sin x + 2 (x — 1); (b) y = cos 2x + ax — ]/ 3.
Solve the following equations:
6. (a) t a n * = - i = - ; ( b ) tan ( | - - ) = - 1 ; ( c ) ~ ~ =
Jl
tan ---- tan x
=5; w 4
1 -f- tan x tan —
—
(d> ~ ^ = c o t x + 3-
11. (a) 2 cos x (cos x —Y 8 tan x) = 5 ;
Jl Jl \ Jl
(
cos — sin -g-) (sec x + tan x) = sin -j- cos *;
(c) log2 (3 sin x) — log2 cos x — log2 (1 — tan a:) —
— log2 (1 + tan x) = 1.
12. (a) sin4 2x + cos4 2x = sin 2x cos 2x;
(b) sin4 x + cos4 x — 2 sin 2x + -|-sin2 2x = 0;
(c) sin4 x + cos4 x + sin 2x + a = 0;
/(j) ____ \_____ I______?______ 4 = 0*
' ' sin2 a: cos2 a: ' sin a: cos a:
(e) tan 5a: + 2 sin 10a: = 5 sin 5a:.
13. (a) cos 2a: — 3 sin x + 2 = 0;
(b) cos (10a: + 12) + 4 ^ 2 sin (5a: + 6) = 4;
(c) 6 sin2 x + 2 sin2 2a: = 5; (d) a sin2 x + cos x — 0.
14. Find the critical points of the function
(a) / (x) = e 3—]/4 x 2— 123 + 9—4 sin2 ± ;
(b) / (x) = sin23* -f- 3 V x * — 4x + 4 -|-c o s l;
(c) / (x) = 2x — 0.25 sin 4* + 0.5 sin 2x;
62
(d) /(x ) = log23 + a : ( l - / l O ) + G / 2 - 2 / 5 +
+ cos x) sin x\
(b) ] /3 s in z + c o s # = / 2 ;
(c) sin 5a: = 1^3 (1 + cos 5a:); (d) cosx + sin x = 1;
(e) sin x + cos x cot = — V 3;
(f) sin |x| tan 5a: = cos x; (g) cos x — sin x = a;
(h) (sin 2a:+ ] /3 cos 2a:)2— 5 = cos (-2- — 2a: j ;
(i) cos6a: -f tan2x cos 6a:tan2* = 1.
oo /„\ tan2x+tana: ^
e‘£‘- W 1 — tan 2x tan a: ~
,,v tan 3x—tan2x _ *
' ' 1 + tan 3x tan 2x *
(c) 2 tan 3# — 3 tan 2x = tan2 2x tan 3x;
(d) cot x + cot 15° + cot (x + 25°) =
= cot 15° cot x cot (x + 25°).
23. (a) sin a: 4 ta n -|- = 0; (b) 1 -{-cosx + tan -y = 0;
(c) tan 2x 4- cot x = 4 sin 2x\
(d) 15 c o t-^-4- 130 sin x = - y - t a n ;
64
24. Are the equations
l + coS2* + sin2* = 0 and 1+ 4f S f + -T T ^ T -°
equivalent?
Solve the following equations:
25. (a) cos 3x = —2 cos x\ (b) cos 9x — 2 cos 6x = 2;
(c) cos Ax = cos2 3x.
26. (a) 3 sin = sin x; (b) sin + 2 = 2 cos 4#;
(d) s i n ( - J - + - | - * ) = 2 s i n ( - ^ - + -|-)*
27. 3 cos x + 3 sin x + sin 3x — cos 3# = 0.
28. (a) sin x + sin x = a sin ;
(b) a2 sin2 3x = sin2 x, a > 0.
29. a cos x -(- b sin x = c, a2 + b2 =f= 0.
30. At what values of p does the equation y p cos x —
— 2 sin x ~ ] / 2 + 2 — p possess solutions?
31. Solve the equation (a) 2 cos x + 3 sin x — 2;
(b) sin x + cos x = a2; (c) sin 2x + 3 cos2x = a;
(d) 2 cos2 6x — 9 sin2 6# -f 4 sin 6#cos 6# = a + 5.
32. Find the critical points of the function
/ (#) — sin 3x + 4"
U cos 3x— ax.
Solve the following equations:
33. (a) sin x-\~ sin [x 4- = 0; (b) sin — sin 2x = 0;
66
<0. (a) sin2 x + sin2 2x = sin2 3a:;
(b) cos2 x + cos2 2x + cos2 3x f cos2 Ax 2;
(c) sin l x + sin 9x = 2 1~cos2 - x j —cos2 2a;j J ;
(d ) sin2 2x -f sin2 x = ~ .
5* 67
(e) sin x -f sin2 x + cos3 x ^=0;
52. (a) ta n z + i - c o t * =
69’
(c) i tan £ + tan y = 2,
1 cos x cos y = 0.5;
(d) j sin x cos y = 1/4,
1 3 tan x = tan y.
62. (a) | ta n a;— 2 s in i/— —2,
1 5 tan x-\- 2 sin y = — 4;
(b) j 4sin i / — 6]/A2coso; = 5 + 4cos2 */,
I cos 2a; = 0;
1 a+ 3
(c )
sin x
cos y
[ sin a; cos y ^ ;
(d) f — ------tani/u = 2a + 1 2, ’
cos x
I tan y (a2 + 2a) cos a: = 0.
63. j sin2 ( —2a;) — (3 —1/2) tan 5y = (3 ]/2 —l)/2,
1 ( 3 - / 2 ) s in ( — 2x) + tan2 5i/=:(3 / 2 - l ) / 2 .
Chapter 3
PROBLEMS ON DERIVING EQUATIONS
AND INEQUALITIES
Chapter 4
6. (a) » = -§ -; W » = - ■ S ’ ? (°) » = T = F ;
(d> » = 4 C T
1 1 . /TV 1
7- (*> » “ 7 T r - T = r : w y ~ x (x + i) ’
2 x -f- 3
<°> y - ^ + ‘a + r ; <d> * = p q £
8- (a) (b) ^ = ^ 4 r ;
<«> <"> » = ^ r 5 r -
<■» » = v \ z $ + i •
10. (a) */ = 2*; (b) y = 3-*; (c) y = 2e^x + x;
(d) y = e~x; (e) y = ■e*~g--* ;
... ex — e~x
(f) y 2 *
11. (a) y = 2 sin x; (b) # = 3 sin ;
(c) i/ = sin (x — Jt/3);
(d) y — —5 sin (10# + rc/8).
12. (a) y = 4 c o s ( —z); (b) y = - 2 c o s - |- ;
87
13. (a) y = sin2 x; (b) y = —2 cos2 2a;;
(c) y — 2 cos x cos 5a:; (d) y = 2 sin Ax sin lx\
(e) y = 2 sin 8a: cos 3a:; (f) y = 2 sin a: cos 11a:.
lT e + i
x2—1 ’
88
0
(d) j (arcsin (x + 1) + arccos (x + 1)) dx;
-2
3
(e) j ( arctan — y- + arccot — y - ) dx.
-l
19. Find the set of positive values of a satisfying the
a
f (8 * 2 + - ^ - * + 4 ) dt= 1 -5* + l = r .
J \ 3 / iog3C+1 / * + i
(b>»=1+3Fri5-’ l - ' « -
18. At what values of a is the area of the figurebounded
by the curves y = 1lx, y — 1/(2# — 1), x = 2 and
x = a equal to In - ^ ?
1 /5
(b) x = 0’ x = 1 ’ ^ = 0;
(c) y — 2*, x = 1, x = 5, y = x — 1;
(d) y = x + 1, y = 3"*, x = 2, x = 4.
20. (a) y = e*, y = es, x = 0; (b) i/ = e~x, i/ = e"4,
x = 1; (c) y — e-*, y = x + 1, x = 5;
(d) y = | x — 1 |, x = 2, y = e*.
21. Find the area of the figure bounded by the curve y =
= 9 “* + 85 and the curve y = k - 3~* + m passing
through the points C (0; 34) and D (1; 14).
22. Find the area of the figure bounded by the curve y —
= 25* + 16 and the curve y = b- 5* -f 4, whose tan
gent at the point x = 1 is at an angle of arctan (40 In 5)
to the #-axis.
23. Find the area of the figure bounded by the curve
y — 15 = e2* and the curve y = 7 j e* Ax passing
through the point A (0, 10).
91
Find the areas of the figures bounded by the following curves:
24. (a) y — sin x, y = 0, x = 0, x — 2jt;
(b) i/ = sin 3x, £ = jt/12, a; = jt/6, y = 0;
(c) y = 2 cos x, x = —jt/4, a: = jt/4, y = 0;
(d) y = cos 2a:, x — —jt/6, a: = jt/8, y = 0.
25. (a) i/ = y 3/2, £ = 1, i/ = cos x, x = 0, y = 0;
(b) i/ = sin x, y — 0.5, y = 0, a; = 0, x = 3;
(c) i/ = sin x, i/ = 2 y 2/3, a: = 0, x = arcsin ( 2 y 2/3);
(d) i/ = 2 — | 1 — x |, y = sin x, x = 0, x = 2.
26. (a) Find the value of & for which the area of the figure
bounded by the curves x = n/18, x = k, y = sin 6#
and the abscissa axis is equal to 1/6.
(b) At what value of d is the area of the figure bounded
by the curves v = cos 5x, y — 0, x = ji/30 and x = d
equal to 0.2?
Calculate the following integrals:
2 2
27. (a) [ y T = ^ d * ; (b) J y i = s ? d * .
o Vs
2 1
28. j In s dx. 29. j arcsin x da:.
1 o
Chapter 5
PROGRESSIONS AND NUMBER SEQUENCES
5.1. Progressions
1. The first term of the arithm etic progression is unity
and the common difference is 4. Is the number 10091
a term of that progression?
2. How many two-digit natural numbers are there which
are multiples of 7?
3. Find the sum of all three-digit natural numbers, which,
being divided by 5, leave a remainder equal to 4.
4. Find the arithm etic progression if the sum of all its
terms, except for the first term, is equal to —36, the
92
sum of all its terms, except for the last term, is zero,
and the difference of the tenth and the sixth term is equal
to —16.
5. The sum of the first four terms of the arithmetic pro
gression is 56. The sum of the last four terms is 112. Find
the progression if its first term is equal to 11.
6. The sum of all terms of the arithmetic progression,
except for the first term, is 99, and except for the sixth
term, 89. Find the progression if the sum of the first
and the fifth term is equal to 10.
7. How many terms of the arithmetic progression should
be taken for their sum to equal 91, if its third term is 9
and the difference of the seventh and the second term
is 20?
8. All terms of the arithmetic progression are natural
numbers. The sum of its nine consecutive terms, begin
ning with the first, is larger than 200 and smaller than
220. Find the progression if its second term is equal to 12.
9. The sum of the first three terms of the arithmetic pro
gression is 30 and the sum of the squares of the first
and the second term of the same progression is 116.
Find the first term of the progression if its fifth term is
known to be exactly divisible by 13.
10. Find the increasing arithmetic progression, the sum of
whose first three terms is 27 and the sum of their squares
is 275.
11. The product of the third and the sixth term of the arith
metic progression is 406. The quotient of the division
of the ninth term by the fourth term of the progression
is equal to 2 and the remainder is —6. Find the first
term and the common difference of the progression.
12. The sum of three numbers is 0.6 (1) and the sum of the
reciprocals of those numbers, forming an arithmetic
progression, is 18. Determine the numbers.
13. The sum of the first seven consecutive terms of the
arithmetic progression is zero and the sum of their
squares is a2. Find the progression.
14. The product of the second and the twelfth term of the
arithmetic progression is equal to unity and the product
of the fourth and the tenth term of the same progression
is b. Find the seventh term of the progression.
15. The sum of the squares of the fifth and the eleventh
term of the arithmetic progression is 3 and the product
93
of the second and the fourteenth term of the same pro
gression is k. Find the product of the first and the
fifteenth term of the progression.
16. The sum of the squares of the fourth and the tenth term
of the arithmetic progression is b and the sum of the
squares of the fifth and the ninth term of the same pro
gression is equal to 1. Determine the product of the
second and the twelfth term of the progression.
17. In an arithmetic progression S p = q, S q = p (S n
being the sum of the first n terms of the progression).
Find S p+q.
18. The sum of the first n terms of the arithmetic progres
sion is equal to half the sum of the next n terms of the
same progression. Find the ratio of the sum of the first
3n terms of the progression to the sum of its first n
terms.
19. Four different integers form an arithmetic progression.
One of these numbers is equal to the sum of the squares
of the other three numbers. Find the numbers.
20. A number of poles lie on the road 10 m from one another.
Beginning with one end, a worker transferred all the
poles, one by one, to the other end, covering for the
purpose a total of 1.44 km. How many poles were
there on the road?
21. Given p arithmetic progressions, each of which consists
of n terms. Their first terms are equal, respectively,
to 1, 2, 3, . . ., p, and their differences are 1, 3, 5, . . .
. . ., 2p — 1. Find the sum of the terms of all the
progressions.
22. The sixth term of the arithmetic progression is equal
to 3, and the common difference exceeds 1/2. At what
value of the difference of the progression is the product
of the first, the fourth and the fifth term the largest?
23. Determine the first term and the common ratio of the
geometric progression, the sum of whose first and third
terms is 40 and the sum of the second and fourth term
is 80.
24. Determine the sum of the first three terms of the geo
metric progression, in which the difference between
the second and the first term is 6 and the difference
between the fourth and the third term is 54.
25. The sum of the first and the fourth term of the geomet
ric progression is 18 and the sum of the second and
94
the third term is 12. Find the difference between the
third and the second term of the progression.
26. The sum of the first and the third term of the geometric
progression is 20 and the sum of its first three terms
is 26. Find the progression.
27. In a geometric progression, the sum of the first 18 terms
exceeds the sum of the first 10 terms by A and the sum
of the first seven terms of the same progression, added
to the number B, is equal to the sum of the first fifteen
terms of the same progression. Find the common ratio
of the progression.
28. In a geometric progression, the sum of the first 109
terms exceeds the sum of the first 100 terms by 12.
Find the sum of the first nine terms of the progression
if the common ratio is equal to q.
29. A geometric progression consists of 1000 terms. The
sum of the terms occupying the odd places is S t and the
sum of the terms occupying the even places is S 2• Find
the common ratio.
30. The sum of the first ten terms of the geometric progres
sion is S x and the sum of the next ten terms (11th
through 20th) is S 2. Find the common ratio.
31. In the increasing geometric progression, the sum of the
first and the last term is 66, the product of the second
and the last but one term is 128, and the sum of all
the terms is 126. How many terms are there in the
progression?
32. Three skaters whose speeds, in a certain order, form
a geometric progression, start in a race-course. Some
time later, the second skater leaves the first skater
behind having run 400 metres more than the first skater.
The third skater covers the distance run by the first
skater by the time he was overtaken by the second
skater in a time interval exceeding by 2/3 min the
time of the first skater. Find the speed of the first
skater.
33. Suppose S n is the sum of the first n terms of a geometric
progression. Prove th at S n (S 3n — S 2n) = (S2n — S n)2.
34. Find the common ratio of an infinitely decreasing geo
metric progression if its sum is thrice that of its first
three terms.
35. The sum of an infinitely decreasing geometric progres
sion is 3.5 and the sum of the squares of its terms is
95
147/16. Find the sum of the cubes of the terms of that
progression.
36. The sum of the second and the eighth term of an infi
nitely decreasing geometric progression is 325/128 and
the sum of the second and the sixth term, reduced by
65/32, is equal to the fourth term of that progression.
Find the sum of the squares of the terms of the progres
sion.
37. The difference between the second and the sixth term
of an infinitely decreasing geometric progression is
8/(9]^3) and the difference between the fourth and
the eighth term is 8/(27 Y 3). Find the ratio of the sum
of the squares of the terms to the sum of the cubes of
the terms of the same progression.
38. The sum of an infinitely decreasing geometric progres
sion is 243 and the sum of its first five terms is 275.
Find the progression.
39. The sum of the terms of an infinitely decreasing geo
metric progression is equal to the greatest value of the
function / (x) = a? + 3# — 9 on the interval [—2; 3],
and the difference between the first and the second
term is / ' (0). Find the common ratio of the progression.
40. A certain number is inserted between the number 3
and the unknown number so that the three numbers
form an arithmetic progression. If we diminish the
middle term by 6, we get a geometric progression.
Find the unknown number.
41. The sum of three positive numbers constituting an arith
metic progression is 15. If we add 1, 4, 19 to those num
bers, respectively, we get a geometric progression.
Find the numbers.
42. Three positive numbers form an arithmetic progression.
The third number exceeds the first number by 14.
If we add the first number to the third and leave the
other two numbers unchanged, we obtain a geometric
progression. Find the numbers.
43. The first and the third term of an arithmetic progres
sion are equal, respectively, to the first and the third
term of a geometric progression, and the second term
of the arithmetic progression exceeds the second term
of the geometric progression by 0.25. Calculate the
sum of the first five terms of the arithmetic progression
if its first term is equal to 2.
96
44. Find a three-digit number whose consecutive numbers
form a geometric progression. If we subtract 792 from
this number, we get a number consisting of the same
digits written in the reverse order. Now if we increase
the second digit of the required number by 2, the digits
of the resulting number will form an arithmetic pro
gression.
45. Three numbers form a geometric progression. If we di
minish the third term by 64, then the resulting three
numbers will form an arithmetic progression. If we then
diminish the second term by 8, we get a geometric
progression. Determine the numbers.
46. Three numbers constitute a geometric progression. If
we add 8 to the second number, then these numbers will
form an arithmetic progression; if we then add 64 to
the third number, the resulting numbers will again
form a geometric progression. Find these three num
bers.
47. Three numbers form a geometric progression. If we double
the middle number, we get an arithmetic progression.
Determine the common ratio of the given progres
sion.
48. The sum of three numbers forming a geometric progres
sion is 124. If we add 1 to the first number and subtract
65 from the third and leave the second number un
changed, the resulting numbers will form an arithmetic
progression. Find the indicated progressions.
49. Three numbers whose product is 125 are three consecu
tive terms of a geometric progression and at the same
time the first, the third and the sixth term of an arithme
tic progression. Find the numbers.
50. Find the sum of the infinitely decreasing geometric
progression whose third term, the triple product of the
first term by the fourth and the second term form, in the
indicated order, an arithmetic progression with the
difference equal to 1/8.
51. If we add 5, 6, 9 and 15, respectively, to four numbers
constituting an arithmetic progression, we get a geo
metric progression. Find the numbers.
52. If we add 4, 21, 29 and 1, respectively,' to four numbers
constituting a geometric progression, we get four num
bers forming an arithmetic progression. Find the num
bers.
7 -0 1 5 2 1 97
53. The sum of the first ten terms of the arithmetic progres
sion is 155 and the sum of the first two terms of the
geometric progression is 9. Determine the progressions
if the first term of the arithmetic progression is equal
to the common ratio of the geometric progression and
the first term of the geometric progression is equal
to the difference of the arithmetic progression.
(c)
(d) 1, — 2, 3, — 4, n, — (n + 1 ) , ..
(e) cos 1°, cos2°, cos3°, cosn0, (f) 0, 1, 0, 3;
0, 5, . . . . 0, 2 » - l , (g) 1, - 2 , 4, - 8 , . . . ’
.... (h) 2, i - , A , . . . . 2— 1 , •••?
4. Is every bounded sequence convergent?
5. Give a definition of an unbounded sequence (without
using the prefix “un”).
6. Using the theorem on the lim it of the sum of two con
vergent sequences, prove that
ra+2 | 2—3n? ^
(a) lim ( - ± -
r> on *
(b>1i 2 ( ( T r + - S r ) - ° -
98
7. The sequence (xn + yn) is known to be convergent. Are
the sequences (xn) and (yn) convergent?
8. Using the theorem on the lim it of the product of two
convergent sequences, prove that
(l + 5rc3) (1 —n + n*)
(a) lim
n2 (m3+ 3)
(b )“ m . ( 15 + ^ ) ( ^ T F ) = 15-
9. The sequence (xn) is known to be convergent. Prove
th a t the sequence (—xn) is also convergent, and if
lim x n — a, then lim (—xn) = —a.
n - + oo n -+ oo
10. Given: lim x n = a, lim yn = b. Prove that
n->oo n~+oo
(*> ( £ i f ) : <•» f ) i
— l2 * -l)(2 n -H ) ) •
hn_h~n
33. Hm bn\ P'n » ^ =7^0-
71-+-00 I
100
Chapter 6
PLANE GEOMETRY
108
7.2. Construction Problems
1. Through a point A lying in the interior of the angle,
draw a straight line so that the point A would be the
midpoint of the segment intercepted on the straight
line by the sides of the angle.
2. Construct a triangle if its two sides and the median,
all emanating from a common vertex, are given.
3. Points A and B belong to one of the half-planes into
which the plane is divided by the straight line p. Find
a point on the line p, the sum of whose distances from
the points A and B is the least.
4. Construct the bisector of the angle whose vertex lies out
side the sheet of paper.
5. A point D is given in the interior of the angle ABC with
an unattainable vertex B. Construct the straight line
(BD).
6. Construct the triangle proceeding from its medians.
7. Given two segments a and b in length. Construct the
segments whose lengths are (a) Y a b \ (b) Y a2 —ab + b2;
(c) Y a2 — 2ab + 4&2.
8. Construct a triangle knowing its perimeter and two
angles.
9. Inscribe into a given circle a triangle similar to a given
triangle.
10. Given a circle with centre at a point O and a point A
lying outside the ring bounded by that circle, (a) Con
struct a tangent to the circle passing through the point
A; (b) through the point A draw a straight line cutting
the circle at points B and C so that | AC | = 2 | A B \
(the point B lies between A and C).
11. Construct three circles, having an external tangency,
w ith centres at the vertices of the given triangle.
12. Points A and B belong to one of the half-planes into
which the plane is divided by the straight line p. (a)
Construct a circle passing through the points A and B
and touching the line p; (b) find the point C 6 P such
that the angle ACB is the greatest.
13. Through the given point of the plane lying outside
the given angle draw a straight line intercepting a
triangle of the specified perimeter on the angle.
109
7.3. Problems on Calculation
Chapter 9
MISCELLANEOUS PROBLEMS
4- 1—a:8
c i* / 3a: 2a:2+
2a:2+ 11 \
5* l Z ( 5* —1 ' **+ 2*-l ) •
6. lim ( _ £ L
\ 3a:2—4
X-»-oo 3a: + 2 )
- i. 2 sin2 a:+ sin a: —1
7. lim -0-. ;;------------ j—t
x->jt/6 2 sin2 a: —3sina: + l
1 —cot3 x
8. lim 2 — cot a: —cot3 x
x-^n/4
44
11. i*
lim - 1^5—a:—2 .
x-+ l |/2 —a: —1
]/a: —6— —6
12. lim 7 ®-y~~ ^ ^ 6#
/ S —1 Y l + a:— Y i —a
13. lim 14. lim
x-*l a: — 1 x-*0 l + a:— 1^1-
-1 2 V'a
a ; S /4 _ a l/4 a ; l/2 _ |_ a l/2 a ;l/4
*5- > s { [ ( - ^ - )
— Y 2log4“j 8.
16. Um
*-2 yTF*—2i_*
17. i im .
*-►3 1 /3 1 —2 cos x
9* 131
tan 9 x — 3 tan x 1 —4 sin 2 x
18. lim ua"~ * ~ o t*n * 19. lim
cos ( z + J t/ 6 ) 3C-*JT/6 cos 3x
l i m l i f U / ' (0).
2C-*0 9
7. The differentiable functions f (x) and g (x) are such
that / (0) = g (0) = 0, with g9 (0) =£ 0. Prove that
/ ( * ) = ( V -~ t4 — 4) a?5—3 « + l n 5
135
9. On the interval [5n/3; 7n/4] find the greatest value
of the function
X
/(*) = l i m , x > 0,
n-*-oo * i*
29. Find the sum of the roots of the equation cos Ax + 6 —
= 7 cos 2x on the interval [0; 314].
30. Find the sum {x) = 1 + x2 + #4 + • . • + x2n and
then the sum S 2 (x) = 2x + Ax%+ . . . + 2n-x2n~1.
31. A point A (xt , y j with the abscissa x t = 1 and a point
B (x2, y2) with the ordinate y 2 = 11 are given in the
rectangular Cartesian system of coordinates Oxy on the
portion of the curve y = x2 — 2x + 3 lying in the
first quadrant. Find the scalar product of the vectors
OA and OB.
32. In the rectangular Cartesian system of coordinates
Oxy a tangent is drawn to the curve y = 8/x2 at the
point A (xo, z/o)> where x 0 = 2, and the tangent cuts
the X-axis at a point B. Find the scalar product of the
vectors A B and OB.
33. At what values of c do the vectors p — (c log2 x\—6; 3)
and q = (log2 x; 2; 2c log2 x) make an obtuse angle
for any x 6 (0; oo)?
34. Find all the values of a for which the vector a =
= (1; 3; sin 2a) makes an obtuse angle w ith the
z-axis if it is known th at the vectors b — (ta n a ;
and c ^ ta n a ; ta n a ;
Chapter 1
Therefore,
lllv iv X v lv f the equation
tX X u C has two
t |U u t X U X X XX<XS l/W v J Ssolutions: a; —" 1X = O3,j Xa;1j "= ■ ‘I4 d.and
U llX tX U X X ij* Ju iXU.
- ( * - 1) = 3, x2 = - 2 ; (b) 0 .
*2. (a) {3 — a ;.3 + a} for a 6 [0; oo), 0 for a 6 (—001 0);
(b) {a — 2; a + 2} for a 6 (— oo). 13. (a) [3; oo); (b) (—oo; 3];
2
(c) {1.5}. 14. { 4 > . ▲ The original equation is equivalent to
3
the equation | 2a; — 1 |2 = | a; + 3 |2 or (2a; — l)2 — (x + 3)2 =
= (2a; — 1 + x + 3) (2a; — 1 — x — 3) = 0. Solving it, we find
the roots. 15. (—-oo; oo) for a = 4; {a/ 2 + 2} for a # 4.
16. (a) {—4.5; 4.5}. A ls£ method. We seek the solution of the equa
tion on three intervals: (1) —oo < x < —4, (2) —4 < x < 4,
(3) 4 ^ x < oo. Qn the first interval the equation has the form
—(x — 4) + (—1) (x + 4) = 9, whence we find that 2a; = —9,
x = —4.5 is a root of the equation. On the second interval the equa
tion has the form —(x — 4) + |( x + 4) = 9, whence we get 8 = 9
(a false equality) and, therefore, on the second interval the equation
has no roots. For the third interval we have (x — 4) + (x + 4) = 9 or
2a; = 9; x = 4.5, the second root of the equation.
2nd method. The function / (a;) = | a; —- 4 | -j- | a; -f- 4 | is even.
Suppose x0 > 0 is a root of the equation. Then —x0 is also a root of the
equation. Solving now the equation —(a; — 4) + (x + 4) = 9 on the
139
interval 0 < x < 4 and the equation (x — 4) + (x 4) = 9 on the
interval 4 ^ x < oo, we find the root x = 4.5. Since the function
/ (x) is even, the second root of the equation is x = —4.5; (b) [—4; 4];
(c) (-o o ; - 4 ] ; (d) [4; oo]. 17. { - 6 ; 2}. 18. {0}. 19. (a) (-o o ; oo) for
a £ (—oo; 0), (—oo; —a) U (<*; °°) for a £ [0; oo). A For a £ (—oo; 0)
the inequality holds for any real x since | x | > 0 (by the definition
of the absolute value of a number). For nonnegative values of a the
original inequality is equal to the collection of the inequalities
r —x > a, if x < 0;
L a;> fl, if 0;
140
34. 35.
40. 41.
42. 43.
44. 45-
142
46.
47.
1-
143
53. A Since the given function is defined in the neighbourhood of the
point x = 0 and y (0) = 1 at that point itself, it follows that for this
function to be continuous at that point, it is necessary that
lim (2x + 1) = lim { - x + a) = 1, i.e. a = 1. 54. (a) {—1/3}.
X-*0 3C-*-0
A The interior points of the domain of definition of the function at
which the derivative is equal to zero or does not exist are called critical
points of the function. The given function is differentiable at every
point of its domain of definition (since it is defined throughout the
number axis, all its points are interior), except for the point x = 1/3
and, therefore, x = 1/3 is a critical point and the equation y' = 0
has no solutions; (b) (—oo; —1], A Let us represent the given function
in the form
f 2x+2, if — 1,
^ 0, if x < —1.
On the interval (—1; oo) the derivative y' = 2, at the point x = —1
the derivative does not exist, and at all points of the interval (—oo; —1)
the derivative y' = 0. Therefore, all the points of the ray (—oo; —1]
are critical; (c) [—1; 1]; (d) (—oo; —3] U 13; oo). 55. (a) Decreases on
(—oo; oo); (b) increases on (—oo; +oo). 56. (a) Decreases on (—oo; 4),
increases on (4; oo); (b) increases on (—oo; 0); decreases on (0; oo).
57. (a) Increases on f —oo; —10], decreases on (10; oo); (b) decreases
on (—5; 4); (c) decreases on the intervals (—oo; —4), (—3; —2) and
(—1; 0); increases on the intervals (—4; —3), (—2; —1) and (0; oo).
58. (a) x = 1/2 is a point of minimum; (b) x = 3/4 is a point of maxi
mum. 59. (a) x = —2/3 is a point of minimum; (b) x = 2 is a point of
maximum. • Use the theorem on the sufficient condition for the
extremum of a function. 60. x = —2 is a point of maximum. 61. x = 2
is a point of minimum for a = 2. For other values of a the function
has no points of extremum. A Suppose a < 2 (for a > 2 the solution
is similar). Then all the points of the interval [a; 2] are critical but
the condition for an extremum is not fulfilled at any of them. In the
case a = 2 the function y = 2 | x — 2 | has a minimum at the point
x = 2 (at that point itself the function is nondifferentiable, but in the
neighbourhood of that point the function is differentiable; in the
left-hand neighbourhood the derivative is negative and in the right-
hand neighbourhood it is positive). 62. a £ [3; oo]. 63. ymin (1) =
= 1 — a, ymax (2) = 2 — a for a £ (—«>; 1); ymin (2) = a — 2;
*/max (1) = a — 1 for a £ (2; oo); ymin (a) = 0, ^ a x (2) = 2 — a,
a £ (1; 1.5); ymin («) = 0, ymax (1) = a — 1 for a £(1.5; 2);
2/min (1*3) = 0; 2/max (1) ^ ^max (2) = 9*3 for a 1.5.
144
(f) 0 . 3. (a) {1/2}; (b) { - 1 ; 3}; (c) (-o o ; - 3 1 U [3; 4);
(d) [ -5 ; 11 U {5}; (e) 0 ; (g) {2} U [ 2 { g - , 3 ] .
4. (a) 5. # Use the identity x\ + x\ = + x2)2 — 2 (xxx^\
(b) —22. # Use the identity + xl = (*i + x2)3 — 3 (xxx2) X
X (xx + a:2); (c) 127. 6. {1}. 9. a £ (0; 4). % Solve the inequality
(a2 — 4a)/2 < 0 ((a2 — 4a)/2 = x xx 2, where x x and x2 are roots of the
equation). 10. a 6 (—2; 2). 11. k 6 (—oo; —1]. A The quadratic equa
tion has real roots if D = [2 (A; — l)]2 — 4 (k + 5) > 0. The solution
of this inequality is (the union of the rays) (—oo; —1] (J [4; oo). For
these values of k the roots can be both positive, of different signs and
both negative. Let us find the values of k for which both roots are
negative. By the Vieta theorem, we have a system of inequalities
xi + x 2 ~ —2 (k — 1) < 0, x xx 2 = k + 5 > 0; its solution is the
ray [4; oo]. Thus, for all k £ (—oo; —1), at least one root of the equa
tion is positive. 12. (a) £ — ■y/r ^2; — * j (j ( 1 .
{ — b/2a = xi~^~x*
/(*«,)> 0
or < —m/4 < 1,
{/ ( P ) > 0, / ( 7 ) > 0,
P<- ± <q
P 2a q
or I (_ 6 )2+ 2 ( / c - 3 ) ( - 6 ) + 9 > 0 ,
ll« + 2 ( fc _ 3 ) .l + 9 > 0 .
—6 < - ( * - 3 ) < l .
Solving this system, we get the answer. 15. (5; 24). 16. [0; 4/61).
17. (2.5; oo). 18. (a) {—2; 2}. A The originate qua tion is equivalent
to the collection of the systems
f x2—x —2 = 0, f x2-\-x —2 = 0,
\ ar^O; farCO.
The solutions of the equation of the first system are as = —1 and
x2 = 2. The value of xx does not satisfy the inequality of this system
10-01521 145
and, therefore, we have here only one solution x = 2. Similarly, we
find the solution x = —2 of the second system; (b) 0 .
19. (a) { ( - 5 ± lT4T)/4; 1/2; 2); (b) { ( - 1 ± /5 ) /2 } .
20. (a) ( - o o ; - 3 ) ] U 12;_oo); (b) [1/3; 1/2]; ( c ] _ ( - o o ; - 1 ] (j [0; oo);
(d) 0 . 21. (a )J (l ± / 17)/2>; (b) {(1 ± / 17)/2}. 22. (a) 0 ;
(b) {(1 ± / 13)/3}. 23. {—2/5; 2}. 24. (a) (—4; 4). ▲ The original
inequality is equivalent to the collection of the systems of inequalities
The solutions of the first system are x £ [0, 4), and of the second system,
x 6 (—4; 0). Uniting these solutions, we get the answer;
(b) ( - o o ; - 3 ] U [3; oo); (c) [ - 5 ; - 2 ] UJ2; 5]; (d) ( - o o ; oo);
(e) 0 . 25. (a) ( - 0 0 ; - ( 5 + l/34)/3) (J ( / 3 4 - 5)/3, 1/3) U (3; 0 0 );
(f) [ - 2 ; 1]. 26. (a) ( - 0 0 ; - 5 ] U [4; 0 0 ); (b) (0; 1/2); (c) [ - 4 ; - 2 ]
27. (a) ( - 0 0 ; 1) U 2 + / l l ; 0 0 ); (b) ( - 3 . 0); U (1; 2).
28. (a) ( - 0 0 ; - 4 ) (J (—3; (9 - /4 6 5 )/6 ) U (9 + /4 6 5 )/6 ; 0 0 );
(b) [- 5 /3 ; 5/3]. 29. (a) {0}; (b) [ - 1 ; 1]; (c) ( - 0 0 ; 1] u [3; 0 0 );
(d) ( - 0 0 ; - 4 ) U (0; 0 0 ); (e) [ - 4 ; - 1 ] U [0; 4]; (f) ( - 3 ; - 1 ] (J {0} U
U [1; 3). 31. [5; 0 0 ). 32. (a) 3 — / 8 + x; (b) 3 + ]/ 8 +
I46
34. (a); (b) 34. (c); (d)
35. 36.
10* 147
37. (a); (b) 37. (c)
41.
= -------- or u = 4aa; — 3a2. Thus, the straight line has the slope
9a2 — a2
k = 4a. Differentiating the function y = x2 and setting y' (x0) =
= 2x0 = k = 4a, we obtain x0 = 2a, y0 = (2a)2 = 4a2. 48. y — 1.
49. y = - 8 . 50. (a) 17; (b) ( - « ; 17). 51. (a) {3}; (b) {2}; (c) {-5} ;
(d) {5}. 52. (a) { -1 /2 ; 0; 1/2}; (b) { - 3 ; 1/4}. 53. (a) {1; 3; 5};
(b) { - 4 ; - 2 ; 0 }; (c) { - 1 }. 54. (a) { - 3 ; - 2 ; 1/ 2 ; 2 }; (b) [ - / 3 ; - 1 ] U
U {(0)} U [1; / 3 J - 55. (a) ( 1 ; 2 }; (b) {1 ; 3}; (c) {2 }. 56. (a) (- o o ; 1.5);
(b) (—2; oo); (c) (— 0 0 ; —1) and (0; 1); (d) ( — 0 0 ; —2), (—1; 0) and
(1; 2). 57. (a) (—1.5; 00); (b) (— 0 0 ; 2); (c) ( — 0 0 ; —0.5);
(d) ( - ( 1 + Y 17)/2; —1/2) and (( / 1 7 - l)/2; 0 0 ). 58. (a) x = 0
is a point of minimum; (b) x = 0 is a point of maximum, (c) x = 1
is a point of minimum; (d) x = —2 is a point of maximum; (e) x = —1
is a point of minimum; (f) x — 1/8 is a point of maximum.
59. (a) The function has no points of extremum; (b) x = —1.5 is a
point of minimum; (c) x = —1 is a point of maximum; x = 0.5 is a
point of minimum. ▲ We have y = — (x — 2) (x + 1) for x < —1,
and in this domain, y' = 1 — 2x, with y' > 0 for all x 6 (—0 0 1 —1)‘>
y = (x — 2) (x + 1), 1/ = 2x — 1 for x > —1, and i/' < 0 for
149
x 6 (—1; 1/2). At the point x =^—1 the derivative of the function
does not exist (the point x = — 1 is critical), but in its neighbourhood
the derivative of the function exists and changes sign from plus to
minus in the passage through that point. Consequently, x = —1 is
a point of maximum; y ' (1 /2 ) = 0 and / > 0 for x 6 ; oo j and,
therefore, x = 1/2 is a point of minimum. 60. (a) x = —1.5 and
x = 1.5 are points of minimum; x = 0 is a point of maximum;
(b) x = 0 is a point of minimum; (c) x = —0.5 is a point of minimum.
61. (a) x = —4, x = —2 , # = 2 , 2 = 4 are points of minimum;
x = —3, x = 0, x = 3 are points of maximum; (b) x = (— |/l35 — l)/2,
2 = 4 are points of minimum; x = —0.5 is a point of maximum.
62. (a) The function has no points of extremum; (b) x = 0 is a point
of maximum. 63. (a) ymln = y (1) = 7, i/max = y (2 ) = 15;
(b) */max = 2/ (2) = —14, yjpln = i/ (3) = —29; (c) */max = y (—1) =
= 8 , ymin = y (1) = 4; (d) i/raln = y (0) = —1, y,lax = ^ (3) = 8 .
64. (a) ymax = y (—3) = 1 0 , yraln = y (—1) = 2 ; (b> ymin = y (1) =
= —2> ftnax = */ (4) = 2;T(C) ^min = 1/ (0) = 0, y^ax = y (2) = 4.
65. # Prove that xx < —6 / (2a) < 2 2. 6 6 . • Consider the function
qp (2 ) = / (2 ) — A , for which xx and 2 « are zeros and use the equality
cp (a?) = /' (*) and the hint given in the answer to problem 65 of this
section. 67. (xx + 2 2 )/ 2 .
CMIX
7. (c); (d)
151
8. (a)
9. (C)
10. (a)
10. (b )
10. (c)
154
10. ( d )
11. (b)
12. (a)
13. ( b )
15, (a) x 2 ; (b> x 2 ! (c) 2(z + l)2 ’ (d) (1 — x)* ’
, . 2 2 , , 5 ^ 11
1 ’ (x+2)* ’ w (2 z - l ) 2 : (g) ( x + l ) 2 : W ( l - 3 i )2 •
16. (a) —3; (b) 1/4; (c) —1; (d) —1. 17. (a) ji/4; (b) arctan ;
1 5
(c) ji — arctan — ; (d) jx—arctan 4; (e) jx—arctan — ; (f) jx—
(g) {—1); (h) {2}; (i) {—1}; (j) {1}. 0 (a) — (k). Factorize the left-hand
side of the equation. 2. A Suppose xx = p/q, where p £ Z, q 6 and
n3 «2 n
p and q are coprime numbers. Then ^ + a ^ + 6 ^- + c = 0 , or
p (p2 + apq + bq2) = —eg3. The right-hand side of the last equality
is a multiple of q. The left-hand side is divisible by q if and only if
q S3 1 , because p 2 + apq + bq2 is not divisible by q (two summands are
multiples of q and the third, p2, is not). Consequently, the last equa
tion has the form p (p2 + ap + b) = —c, and it follows that c is
a multiple of p — xx. 3. (a) {—2; —1; 11. A The constant term of the
given equation is equal to — 2 and, therefore, only the numbers ± 1 , ± 2
can be rational roots. Substituting x = 1 into the equation, we get
l 3 + 2* l 2 — 1 — 2 = 0, i.e. 1 is a root of the equation. Factorizing
now the left-hand side, we get s 3 — l 3 + 2 a:2 — 2 *l 2 — + 1 =
= (x - 1 ) (x2 + « + 1 ) + 2 (* - 1 ) (x + 1 ) - (x - 1 ) =
= (x — 1) (a:2 + 3a: + 2) = 0. Solving the equation x2 + 3x + 2 =
= 0 , we find the other roots of the original equation, (b) {—3, 2 }.
Remark. The given equation has two equal roots: x = 2. Such roots
are called miltiple roots. The root x =* 2 is a root of multiplicity 2;
158
(c)_{3}; (d) { 1 }; (e) {—1 , —1/2, 1/3}. 0 Set x = —1/y, (f) {1 / 2 }.
Multiply the equation by 4 and set 2x = y. 4. 0 Use the identity
a (x — xx) (x — x2) (x — x3) = ax3 + bx2 + cx + d. 5 . —2 p.
6 . { / " ( l/"l3 + 3)/2 — ( l/^13 — 3)/21. ▲ Set x = y — i/y. Then
the equation assumes the form
3 + /1 3 3 + /1 3
*1= V h -
Vh
1
IV-
y 13+3 s / /l3 -3
2
\( x- —
^ S )J 2~ 6 ^x —
V S “ 16=0’ and set x——2d~*=y-
or
- (x2+ 2) -(3a:2- 2 )
( 2)
4a:
Solving now equations (1) and (2) for x, we get the answer,
(b) { — 1 — Y% + a; “ I + Y& + a) lor a 6 1—3, —1 ),
_ / 3 + a; | / 3 + a - 1; —1 - / l + a; / 1 + a - 1} for
a £ [—i; oo), 0 for a 6 (—<*>; —3). A Let us solve the given equation
for a assuming x to be the parameter: a2 — 2 ( x2 — 1 ) a + a* — 6 a:2 +
+ 4a: = 0;
a = x2 2x — 2 (1 ) or a = x2 — 2x (2 ).
Solving equations (1) and (2) for x, we obtain xlt% = —1 ± Y% + a,
a:s 4 = — 1 ± j A + a. The roots ari and x2 are real if a £ [—3|_oo),
and xs and_a:4 are real if a_ 6 [—1; oo). 18. {(1 — y r29)/2; (5 — Y 17)/2;
(1 Y 29)/2; (5 + 17)/2}. A We represent the left-hand part of
the equation as (x2 + ax + c) (a:2 + 6 a: + d) = 0 , or a:4 + (a + 6 ) a:3 +
+ (ab + c + d) x2 + (be + ad) x + cd =s a^ — 4a:8 — 10a:2 + Six —
— 14. We have a system
a + b = - 4,
{ ab c -f- d = — 1 0 ,
6c + ad = SI,
cd = —14.
Since a, b, c and d are integers, it follows from the last equation that
either
106 c = —1, d = 14 or c = 2, d = —7. The system is completely
satisfied by the second pair of values of c and d\ for these values we get
a = —5 and b = 1 for the other coefficients. Solving now the equations
x2 — bx + 2 = 0 and x2 — x — 7 = 0, we find the roots of the
original equation. 19. (a) (—2 , 1 ) U (3; oo). A For x £ (3; oo), all the
terms in the product are positive and, consequently, p (x) =
= (x + 2) (x — 1) (x — 3) > 0 for all x £ (3; oo); for x 6 (1; 3) the
term x — 3 is negative (alone), and each of the terms (x — 1) and
(x + 2) is positive. Therefore, p (x) < 0 for x 6 (1; 3), and for
x 6 (—2 ; 1 ) the polynomial p (a;) has two negative terms \{x — 3 ) and
(x — 1)) and one positive term (x + 2). This means that p (x) > 0
for x 6 (—2 ; 1 ); for x 6 (—■ oo; —2 ) all the three terms are negative
and, therefore, p (x) < 0 on this interval. Uniting the intervals,
where p (x) > 0 , we get the answer; (b) (—2 , 0 ) U (1 ; 2 );
(c) [ - 4 , —2 ] U {1}; (d) (—3; 2 ) for n = 2k - 1 , k £ N; (-o o ; - 3 ) U
U ( - 3 ; 2 ) for n = 2k, k £ N. 2 0 . (a) ( - 3 ; 2 ) U (4; oo); (b) ( - o o , - 2 ] U
U { -1 } ; (c) (1 / 2 ; oo). 21. (a) (-o o ; - 1 ] (j (1} U 12 ^ oo); (b) ( - 5 ; - 1 ).
22. (a) (-o o ; - / 3 ) (J ( - 1 / / 3 ; i [ Y 3) U / 3 ; oo);
(b) ( 2 - 4 / / 3 ; 1 ) U (3; 2 + 4 / / 3 ) . • Set x - 2 = y.
23. Ja) (—oo; oo). • Set s 2 — * = y; (b) ( - ( 3 + y"33)/2;
( / 3 3 — 3)/2). • Set * 2 + Zx + 1 = y. _________
24. (a) (I + Y T - Y 3 + 2 Y l ; 1 + y T + 1^3 + 2 YW-
▲ The original inequality is equivalent to the inequality p (x) =
= x? — 4a;3 — 6 a;2 — 4a; + 1 < 0. We factorize the polynomial on
the left-hand side of the inequality, for which purpose we solve the
equation p (x) = 0. Since x == 0 does not satisfy the given equation,
it follows that it is equivalent to the equation x 2 + 1 /a;2 —
— 4 (x + 1/a;) — 6 = 0. Setting now x + 1/a; = y, we obtain an
equation y2 — 4y — 8 = 0, whose roots are yx = 2 (1 + y^3) and
y2 = 2 (1 — Y 3 ). The polynomial p (a;) can now be represent
ed as (x2 - 2 (1 + / 3 ) a; + 1) (x2 - 2 (1 - / 3 ) a; + 1). Here
x2 — 2 ( 1 — j/TT) a; + 1 > 0 for any a; £ R and, therefore, the original
inequality is equivalent to the inequality x2 — 2 ( 1 + Y 3) a; -f- 1 >
> 0 whose solutions are given in the answer; (b) ( — 1 — |/TT,
(3 — Y 17)/2) U ( / 3 — 1 (, (3 + Y 17)/2). • When you factorize
the left-hand part of the inequality, make use of the substitution
y = x — 2lx. 25. ▲ We have
p (a;) = (a; — 1 ) x [a;4 (a;2 + x + 1 ) + 1 ] + 1 ( 1)
or
P (*) = (1 - *) + a;2 (1 - ar^) + a;3. (2)
It follows from (1 ) that p (a;) > 0 for x 6 (—oo; 0 ] (J IU °o), and
from (2 ) that p (a;) > 0 for x 6 (0; 1). Thus, p (x) > 0 for any x 6 R*
p (x )
26. ▲ The function / (a;) = — is defined throughout the number
V \^/
axis, except for the points xk, k 6 k ^ n, which are zeros of the
polynomial Q (x). Suppose x0 is one of the solutions of the inequality
f (x) > 0. Then P (a;0) and Q (x0) are numbers of the same sign and,
consequently <p (x0) = P (a;0) Q (x0) > 0, i.e. x0 is also one of the
solutions of the inequality q> (x) = P (x) Q (a;) > 0. (For x = x^ the
value of the function q> (xh) is equal to zero and the values of x&do not
satisfy the inequality q> (a;) > 0 . ) Thus, all solutions of the inequality
11-01521 161
/ (x) > 0 are also solutions of the inequality <p (x) > 0 (because of the
arbitrariness of the choice of the number x0). We can prove by analogy
that if x0 is some solutions of the inequality cp (a;) > 0 , then this number
x0 is also a solution of the inequality / (x) > Q (P (x0) and Q (x0) are
numbers of the same sign). If P (x) and Q (x) assume values of different
signs for all x from the domain of the function / (x), then the inequalities
f (x) > 0 and tp (x) >* 0 have no solutions, i.e. these inequalities are
also equivalent. 27. (a) (—2; 0) U (2; oo). A The inequality
- 2 . 2 “ == x 0 is equivalent to the inequality
(x + 2 ) (x — 2 ) x > 0 $ solving it by .the method of intervals, we get
the answer; (b) (—1, 2); (c) (—oo; —1) |J (0, 1/2] U (1; 2);
(d) (1 ; 5/3) U (2; 7/3) U (3; oo). % Reduce the left-hand part of the
inequality to the form x + I/O* —■4) + x + l/(x — 3); (e)J—2 ; —1 ) U
U 10; 1 ] UI 2 ; 0 0 ); (f) ( - 7 ; - / 3 7 ) U ( - 5 ; 0 ) U (5; 1^37) U (7; «>)•
28. (a) ( - 1 ; 0). • Set x 2 + x = V\ (b) ( - ° ° ; - 2 ) U ( - 1 ; 1) U (2; 3) U
U (4; 6 ) U (7; oo). A Let us transform the left-hand side of the in
equality
' ^ r ) + 4 (ir+ r )
= ____ *____________3____ j
x 2 —5 x + 6 x2—5 x + 4 L
Setting now x2 — 5x + 5 = y, we get (after transformations) an
inequality > 0 , which is equivalent to the inequality
(y—i)(y+i)
(y + 1) (y — 1) (y — 11) (y — 19) > 0; the solution of the last
inequality is (—oo; —1) |J (1; 11) U (19; oo). Solving then the col
lection of the inequalities
x2 — 5x + 5 < —1, 1 < x 2 — 5* + 5 < 11
and x2 — 5x + 5 > 19,
we get the answer; (c) (-o o ; 1 ) (J (3/2; 5/2) (J (7/2; 4). 29. (a) ( - 1 / 2 ; 1 );
(b) 1—2, 11. # See the solution of problem 15 of this section.
30. (a) (0 ; 1/3) (J (3; oo). • Reduce the left-hand part of the inequality
to the form (x + 1 /x + 2 )2/(x + 1 /x) and set x + 1 /x = y\
(b) [ - J 1 + / 5 ) /2 ; - 1 ] U [(1 - Vr5)/2; 0 ) U [ ( / 5 - l) / 2 ; 1 ] U
U 1(1^5 + l) / 2 ; oo). • Set x — 1/x = y. 31. (—oo; —6 ) U
U ( ( 6 - 6 /2 6 )/5 ; —4) U ( - 4 , 0 ) U (6 ; ( 6 + 6 /2 6 )/5 ).
• . Represent the right-hand part of the inequality in the form
(x - 6 )/(x + 6 ) + ( x + 6 )/(x - 6 ). 32. [0; \/2].
33. [ - 1 ; - 2 Y % - 3 ) (J (1; 3]. 34. (a) 3x2 - 12x; (b) 1/3 - 3x2
(c) 4x* — 6 ; (d) 3x2 — 2x3; (e) 3x2 + 2x + 3, (f) 3x2 — 8 x + 3;
(g)4x* + 9x2 + 14x + 7; (h) (x — 1) (x — 2) (x - 3) +
+ x.(x — 2) (x — 3) + x (x — 1) (x — 3) + x (x — 1) (x —2);
(i) (1 - x2)/(l + x2)2;(j) (x2 - 2 x - 2 ) / ( 2 + x2)2;
(k) (2x* + 9x2 — 3)/(x + 3)2; (1) (2x« + 4x* — 4x + 4)/(x+ l)3;
162
(m) (2x3 - 9x2 - 24x + 7)1(x - 4)2; (n) 3x2 + 4/(1 - x4);
(o) - 9 0 (2 — 3x)29; (p) 32 (3x + I/*2) ( 6 * 2 — Alx + 1>7;
(q) —(8 x (x2 + l))/(xa - l)3; (r) 8 (4x« - 3x2 + lOx) X
X (x4 — x3 + 5x2 — 2)’. 35. (a) 12; (b) 0; (c) 60; (d) 7; (e) 0; (f) 1/2J
(g) 15a2+ 2 /a 3 — 1 ; (h) —1 / ( 1 + a2); (i) 6 ; (j) (—1 )" n\.
36. (a) y = —x; (b) y — 2 = 0 ; (c) y ——3x + 5; (d) y = —l l x — 7.
(e) y = 44x — 84; (f) y = 2x — 2; (g) y = —4x + 7.
3 7 . ( - y T ; 2 + yT ) and ( / ~ 2 ; 2 — y T ). 38. (—2 ; 52/3) and
(5 ; —197/6). 39. (1; 0) and (—1; —4). 40. (3; 9). 41. (0; 1). 42. • Show
that the inequality 5x4 + 8 > 0 holds for any x £ R . 43. (a) (1/3; 1/2);
(b) {>/3}; (c) the function has no critical points; (d) {—2; —4/9);
(e) { - 1 ; 0 ); (f) { y T }. 44. (a) ( 2 ); (b) { - 3 ; - 2 ; 1 ); (c) ( 0 ); (d) { - 1 ; 0 ; 1 };
(e) ( 0 ). 4 5 . (a) { - y T ; yT }; (b) { - 3 ; - 2 ; 2 ; 3);
(c) {(3 — yT)/2; (3 + /5 ) /2 ) ; (d) {—1; l);_(e) (2). 46. (a) ( - 2 , 1),
(b) (—oo; - 1 / 4 ); (c) ( - / 1 2 ; 0 ) and (0 , V' 1 2 ), <d) (— / 2 , —1 ) and
(—1, }/T). 47. (a) (—oo; 1/3) and (3; oo); (b) (1; 3); (c) (0; oo);
(d) ( — 2 — / 3 ; —1 ) and (—1 ; / 3 — 2 ); (e) (—oo; —1 ) and (1 ; oo).
48. (a) x = —5 is a point of maximum, x = 3 fs a point of minimum;
(b) the function has no points of extremum; (c) x = 1/3 is a point of
minimum, x = 1 is a point of maximum; (d) x = -r5/4 is a point
of minimum; (e) x = —3 and x = 4 are points of minimum; x = 1/2 is
a point of maximum; (f) x = 1 is^a point of minimum; (g) x = 0 is
a point of minimum. 49. 8 / 2 . 50. (a)_ymIn = y (—1) = —13,
Umax ~ V (°) = ~ 3> Jhuta = V V^) = —4 V 2, Umax =
= y (1) = 5; (c) ymin = V (1/4) = 8 ; ymax = y (2) = 34;
(d) ym[n — y (—1) — 7, ymax ~ U (1) ~ In U ( 2)
= 8/3, ymax = y (—1) = 3.
11* 163
52. On the intervals
(—0 0 ; —2 /}/3 ) and
^ ( 2 / / 3 ; 0 0 ) the function
x decreases, on the interval
Vm-r
2 (_ 2 //3 ; 2 /1 /3 ) it in
creases; x = —2 /1/3 is a
point of minimum; x = 2l Y 3
is a point __ of maxi
mum; y (—2 / ]/3 ) = —3 —
- 1 6 /( 3 /3 ) ; y j 2 / / 3 ) =
= -3 + 16/(3/ 3 ) .
-2 .1 7 x
2
165
57. On the intervals
(— 0 0 ; — 1) and (1; 0 0 ) the
function decreases, on the
in te rv a l (—1; 1) i t increases;
x — — 1 is a p o in t of m in i
mum, x = 1 is a p o in t of
m axim um .
166
60. On the intervals
(—0 0 ; —3) and (3; 0 0 ) the
function decreases, on the
intervals . (—3; — )/3 ),
( - / 3 ; / I ) and ( V 3; 3) ^
it increases; x. = —3 is a
point of -minimum, x = 3 is
a point of maximum;
y ( - 3 ) = 9, y (3) ^ - 9 .
167
1.5. Linear S ystem s of E quations and In eq u a lities
I. (a) {(0; 0)}; (b) | {(c, c/2) | c £ 1R}; (c) {(cx, c2) | cx £ R, c2 £ !R};
(d) {(c; 0) | c £ IR}; (e) 0 . 2. (a) {(1; - 1 )} ; (b) {(3/4 + 2c, c) \ c £ R};
(c) 0 ; (d) {(c; Ac — 1/2) | c £ R} for a £ {—1/2} and 0 for a ${—1/2}.
3. (a) (-« > ; - 1 ) U ( - 1 ; oo); (b) k £ 1R; (c) (-o o ; - 2 ) U ( - 2 ; oo).
4. (a) {-2 /3 }; (b) {1}; (c) { -1 /2 } . 5. {(0; 0)}. 6 . {(0; 0; 9/4); (2; - 1 ; 1)}.
A Substituting the solution (1; 3) into the system and taking into
account the necessary condition for indeterminacy of the system of
equations, we obtain a system of equations for a, 6 and c:
f a —3b = 2a — b, f a = —2b,
s c + 1 -f- 3c = 10 — <z+36, \ 4c = 9 + 56,
I a/(c + l ) = — 6 /c I 6 (c — 1 ) = 0 .
This systein has two solutions; (0; 0; 9/4) and (2; —1; 1). We can make
sure by verification that for these values of a, 6 and c the condition
— r- = — = ttt—— 7 -jtt is satisfied (in the second equation of
c+ 1 c 10 — a + 36 ^
the system the coefficients are nonzero), i.e. the sufficient condition for
indeterminacy of 1 the original system of equations is fulfilled.
7. (a) {3}; (b) {9/4}. 8 . {(—2, —7)}. A The second system of equations
has a unique solution (x0; y0). Therefore, the systems are equivalent
if the first system of equations has a unique solution (a:0; y0). Let us
find this solution. Since x0 + y0 = 3 and x0 + 3y0 = 3, we find that
x0 = 3 and y0 = 0 when we solve the system of these equations. Sub
stituting these values of the variables into the first equation of the
second system, we get a2 — 4. Consequently, ax = —2 and a2 = 2.
The substitution aY = —2, x = 3, y — 0 into the first equation of the
first system yields —2*3 + 2-0 = 6 + l, 6 = —7. The value a — 2
will not do in this case since then the first system of equations will have
an infinite number of solutions. 9. (—2; 4). 10. (—1 — {/IT; oo).
II. {(—1; 4)}. # Set 1/(2a: + 7/ — 1) = u and 1l(x + 2 y — 3) = v.
12. (a) {(3; 1); (-3 /2 ; 5/2); ( - 9 ; - 5 ) ; (9/2; -1 /2 )};
(b) {(—3; - 2 ) ; ( - 2 ; - 3 ) ; (3; 2); (2; 3)}. 13. {(30; 10)}. A Suppose we
are given an equation ax + by = c, where a, 6 and c are integers,
a and 6 being coprime, and we have to find all integral x and y satisfy
ing this equation. We assume that by some means (say, by means of
selection) we have found one integer solution: x = a, y = p. Sub
stituting these values into the equation, we get an identity aa + 60 =
= c. Subtracting this identity, term-by-term, from the given equation
and transforming the result, we obtain a (x — a) + 6 (y — P) = 0 ,
ax = aa — 6 (y — 0), x = a — ( 6 (y — &))la. For x to be an integer,
it is necessary and sufficient that the expression ( 6 (y — 0 ))/a be
an integral number (a is an integer), i.e. y — 0 must be divisible by a.
Designating the integral quotient from the division of y — 0 by a as t,
t € 7<y we get y = 0 + at and then x = a — bt. Thus, all solutions
can be described by the formulas x = a — bt, y — 0 + at, t £ 7.
Let us write the solutions of the given problem in the form x — a — 31 f,
y = 0 + 231, t £ 7 , and find some special solution (a; 0). We rewrite
the original equation in the form 23a; = 1000 — 31 y and solve it with
respect to x: x = 43 — y + (11 — 8y)/23. It follows from this notation
that (11 — 8y)f23 must be an integer, i.e. (11 — 8t/)/23 = u, u £ 7 ,
168
14. ( a) 14. (b)
169
or 8 r/ = 11 — 23w. N o w we can find y: y = (11 — 24m + m ) / 8 =
= 1 — 3m + ( m + 3)/8. Setting u = —3, we get a special solution
P = 1 — 3 (—3) = 10 and a = 43 — 10 — 3 = 30. Thus, the solu
tion of the given equation has.the form x = 30 — 31*, y = 10 +.23*,
*6 Solving the system of inequalities 30 — 31* > 0 and 10 +
+ 23* > 0 in integers, we find that * = 0, i.e. x = 30, y — 10.
16. ( - ( 1 + / 13)/2; —2). 17. {(1; 2; 3)}. 18. 0 . 19. {(2 ; - 3 ; 6 )}.
20. { ( - 2 1 - 2; 3< + 1; 2t + 3) | t 6 R}. • Set —(x + 2)/2 =
= (y — l)/3 = (z — 3)/2 = *. 21. (a) 25. A Is* method. We multiply
the equations of the system by a and p (ap ^ 0) and sum them up:
(2a/3 + p) x + (4a/5 + p) y + (5a/6 + p) z = 61a + 79p.
We require that the following equalities should hold simultaneously:
2a/3 + P = 0, 4a/5 + p = 2/5; 5a/6 + p = 1/2. Then we have
S = 2z//5 + z!2 = 61a + 79p. The values of a and p can be found
from the system of equations
f 2 a /3 + P = 0 ,
i 4a/5 + p = 2/5,
I 5a/6 + p = 1/2.
This system is consistent and has a solution a = 3, P = —2; S =
= 61-3 - 79*2 = 25.
2nd method. Let us represent the original system of equations in the
form
( 2j;/3+4z//5= 61 — 5 z/6 ,
I x + y = 79 —z
and solve it with respect to x, y , assuming z to be known. Multiplying
the second equation by —2/3 and adding it to the first equation, we
obtain
79-2 \ / 5 2 \
3 ) IT 3 ) Z’
A __ 25 x . 2 or *
15 ^ 3 6 5 T 2' = 2 5 _ 2' •
170
Now we find S = 2yl5 + z!2 = 25 — zl2 + zl2 = 25;
(b) {(27; 10; 42)}. ▲ Since, by the hypothesis, x, y and z are natural
numbers, it follows that x = 3k, y = 51 and z = 6 m, where k 6 N
/ £ N, m 6 The system of equations can now be represented in the
form
f 4Z+5m = 61—2k,
I 5/ 6 m = 79 — 3k.
Hence we find I = 29 — 3k and m = 2k — 11. The greatest value of
k £ N satisfying the system of inequalities
f k > 0,
< 29 — 3& > 0 ,
I 2k —1 1 > 0
is A: = 9. Now we can find the solution of the system: x = 3-9 = 27,
y = (29 - 3*9) 5 = 10, z = 6 ( 2-9 — 1 1 )i = 42. 22. a < 0.
• Exclude 6 and c from the system of inequalities. 23. A regular
octahedron
^ -<)}•
14. {(3; 1; —2); (—5; —3; 0)}. # In the first equation of the system
express y in terms of x and substitute it into the second equation.
15. {(3; 5; - 1 ) ; ( - 3 ; - 5 ; 1)}.
16. { , 2 ; 3); , - 2 ; - 3 ,; (— f a , - f a : — f a ) i
* + y _ 5_ 1 , 1 y+z 7_ 1 . 1 x-Vz _ 6 1 . 1
xy x 'y ’ yz y z’ xz x z
22. (a)
y, I
173
23. (a)
174
Chapter 2
TRANSCENDENTAL FUNCTIONS, EQUATIONS
AND INEQUALITIES
\ / s + 1 0 — Y x — 2 = 2,
{ Y x+ 10 + Y x ~ 2 = 6 .
z+l = 2 Y x ~h 1 . (2 )
We solve equation (2) by the method explained in the solution of
problem 4 (a): we set Y x + 1 = y ^ 0 and pass to the system
/ y2 = 2y,
I y> 0
175
and hence find the roots: x1 — —1, x2 = 3. Since we have squared
equation (1), the roots of equation (2) must be checked. Verification
shows that they both satisfy the original equation.
2nd method. Let us multiply both parts of the equation by the
expression conjugate to the left-hand side of the equation Y%x + 3 +
+ / x + 1 (in the domain of definition of the equation (x ^ —1 ) this
expression is nonzero). As a result we get a system of equations with
respect to Y%x + 3 ^ 0 and Y x + 1 > 0 ,
| y r2x+ 3 — / i + l = l ,
I / 2 a : + 3 + \ f x-\-i = a:+2,
{ 7 —x-\-x — 3 ~ w 2 + y2 = 4 {u ^
8 — a 2 )/ 2 ;
1 v1 = ( a - Y ^ =T 2)/2.; \ u2 - ( a + / 8 ^ 2 )/ 2 .
For the equation to have real roots, the following system of inequalities
must be satisfied:
I a— / 8 —a2 > 0 .
The values a £ [2; 2 Y 2] are the solution of the system. Now we can
find the answer: x — 3 = v2, a: = 3 + y2 = 5 ± f l / 8 — a2/2.
9. (a) D (y) = [—1; 2]; E (y) = l Y 3; Y 6 ]» • To find the set of
values of the function, solve the equation Y 2 — x + Y 1 + ^ = y
and find D (y); (b) D (y) = [—1/2; 3/2]; E (y) = [0; 2]. 10. {3}.
▲ Setting y x — 2 = w ^ 0, y 4 — x = v ^ 0, we get a system
176
of equations
/ u + v = 2,
\ u*+ v4 = 2 .
Raising the first equation to the fourth degree and taking the second
equation into account, we obtain uv (2 (u + v)2 — uv) = 7, and
since u + v = 2 , we have (uv)2 — 8 (uv) + 7 = 0 , whence we get
(uv)x = 1; (uv)2 = 7. Furthermore, to find the solutions of the original
equation, we have to solve two systems of equations:
r u+ y= 2 , r u+ v= 2 ,
\ uv = i , \ uv = 7.
The first system has a solution u = v = 1. Now wt obtain j/ * — 2 =■
= a = 1, a: = 3. The second system has no real solutions.
1 1 . {(2 a + 1 )/(a - 2 )} for a 6 ( - ° o ; 1/3] U (2; oo), 0 for a 6 (1/3; 2 ].
A The original equation is equivalent to the system
( x2-\-ax — 2 a = ( x + l ) 2#
I * + l> 0.
Solving the equation of the system and selecting the values of « for
which the inequality x + 1 ^ 0 is satisfied, we get the answer.
1 2 . {a + 1 + YYa\ a + 1 — Y M for a £ [0 ; 1 / 2 ], {a + 1 + YTa)
for a £ (1/2; oo), 0 for a £ (—oo; 0). 13. (—oo; 0) for a = 0; {0; 3a/4)
for a £ (0, oo), 0 for a 6 (—«>; 0). 14. {a2 + a; a2 — a + 1} for
a 6 10; 1], {a2 + a} for a £ (1; oo), 0 for a 6 (— oo; 0). 15. {0} for
a = 1 , 0 for a ^ 1 . 16. { - 1 } U [ 2 ; oo). 17. (0.5; 2 ]. 18. [ - / 3 ; 0 ) U
U (0; 2]. 19. 1—0.5; oo) for a £ [1; oo), [ - 0 .5 ; - 0 . 5 (1 - 1/(1 - a)2)
for a £ (—oo; 1 ). 20. (1; 3]. 21. [—2; oo) for a £ [—2; oo), 0 for
a £ (—oo; —2). 22. (a) (—5/8; 2.4]. A Suppose ]/2 4 — lOx =* y > 0;
then i = 0.1 (24 — y%). The original inequality is equivalent to the
system
I V>0■
The solution of this system are the values of y satisfying the inequality
0 < i/ < 5.5. Solving now the inequality 0 ^ Y 24 — 10a: < 5.5,
we get the answer; (b) ((>^5 — l) / 2 ; 1 ]; (c) (3; 4.8]; (d) (1; 2/1/11].
# Set 1/*=■ t; (e) ( ( / l T — 5)/2, 1]. 23. (a) [3; 12); (b) [—2; oo);
(c) ((5 - Y 13)16; OO); (d) (8/3; oo). 24. [ 2; - /S T ) .
25. (a) [3 / 2 ; 2 ) U (2; 26). • Multiply the numerator and the denomina
tor of the fraction by y r2 x — 3 + 1; (b) (—2 ; 1 ) U (1; «>)• • Multi
ply both parts of the inequality by 2 + Y x + 3; (c) [0 ; 1 / 2 ). A Only
x > 0 can be solutions of the given inequality. Multiplying both parts
12-0 1 5 2 1 177
of the Inequality by V m + 2 + stY b x > 0 and transferring a ll its
terms to the right-hand side, we get the inequality
0 Y ^ + 2+ Y T x ). ( 1)
The term (1 + Y m + 2 + Y $*) positive and, therefore, inequality
(1) is satisfied if 4* — 2 < 0, i.e. x < 1/2. It remains to solve the
system of inequalities
/ *>0,
X * < 1/2;
(d) (1/ 2 ; oo). 26. 1—4; 0 ) (J (4; 6). ▲ The given inequality can only
be satisfied by those values of x for which 24 + 2 x — xa > 0 and
x 0. Hence we obtain two intervals: 1—4; 0) and (0; 6 ]. It is evident
that x € [ —4; 0 ) are solutions of the inequality since at these values of
x the left-hand part of the inequality is negative and the right-hand
part is positive. For the second interval we have } / 24 + 2 x — x 2 < *
or (after squaring both parts of the inequality) x 2 — x —{12 > 0 , whence
we get x 6 (—oo; —3) U (4; oo).r; Consequently, (—oo; —3) fj
HI (0; 6)1 - 0 (4; oo) n (0; 6 ] =- (4; 6 ]. 27. I—1; - 3 / 4 ] . A Setting
V * + 1 + V * + 3 =» y, we reduce the original inequality to the
form y1 — 3y + 2 < 0. Solving it, we find l < y < 2 or 1 <
< } / x + 1 + Y * + 3 < 2, which is equivalent to the system
( / ^ + i + y r« + 3 > i ,
j /* + l+ /» + 3 < 2 ,
Let us solve the first inequality of the system . Squaring it and trans
forming, we get an inequality 2 x %+ 4# + 3 > —3 — 2 x, whose
right-hand side is negative for x > — 1 and the left-hand side is
nonnegative. Therefore, all® 6 I—1; oo) are solutions of this inequality.
After squaring and collecting terms, the second inequality assumes the
form V x* + 4x + 3 < —x. It can have solutions only for — 1 < x <
< 0. Squaring the inequality, we get 4# + 3 < 0, or x < —3/4. Taking
the first inequality into account, we get the answer. 2 8 .2k, k g Z. 29. No,
there is not. 30. (a) 1/( 2 ] /« ) . A / ' ( # ) = lim ,V * + A x — Y* _
Am-Q Ax
= l i m _____( * + A * ) - * _ _ 1Im I ______ __ ____ 1____ =
a«->o A z ( y i - f A i-(- Y x ) * x"*-0 y ' » + 5 s + V *
1 r-
(the function f ( x ) = * Y * is continuous at the point x,
178
(d) ( 1 + V 2 + / 3 + 2 / S + 2 ^ + 2 / ^ + 8 * / 6 ) / 2 (•) (1 —
_ / 2 ) / ( 2 Y~x (1 + / S ) « ) ; (f) - x l / r = 7 * ; (g) - 4 (1 - 2 ) / i ) » / / J;
(h) (1/(2 V J + / i ) ) (l + l/(2 / i ) ) . 32. (a) 9; (b) - ]/3/3; (c) 0.
33. x —+ 4 = 0; (b) y + 1 «=* 0; (c) y + x — 4 = 0 .
(d) y - 3x + 3 = 0. 34. (0; 4/27) and (-2 /2 7 ; 0). 35. (a) {4};
(b) {1}; (c) {3}; (d) the function has no critical points; (e) {1/3}; (f) the
function has no critical points. 36. (a) (4; oo); (b) (1/2; oo);
(c) ( / 7 - 2; oo); (d) (0; 9) U (9; oo); (e) (0, 9). 37.(a) (-o o ; 2.5);
(b) (1; 2); (c) (—oo; 1/4); (e) (0; oo) (e) (0; 1). 38. ▲ Let us considerJhe
function / (x) = 2 | / ^ + 1lx — 3. Its derivative / ' (x) = 1/
— 1 lx2 exists on the given interval and is positive everywhere; / (1 ) = 0 .
Consequently, / (x) > 0 on that interval and this means that 2 ]/# * >
> 1lx — 3. Remark. The proof can be carried out by elementary
techniques, representing / (x) as / (x) =* ( V n — l ) a ( 2 1 /It + 1 )/*.
39. (a) max / (x) = / (0) = 10, min / {«) = / (8 ) =» 6 ;
I _gjgj [--6)8]
(b) max / (x) = / (4) =» 8 , min / ( * ) = > / (0) = 0; (c) max / (x) =»
[0:4] [0{4] [0i3]
= / (3) - f"9, min / (x) - / (0) = / (2) = 0. 40. The point x = 1
[0)3]
is point of minimum of the function, which does not have points of
maximum; max / (x) =» / (3) = 4y*6, min / (x) *■ / (1) =» 0.
[0)3] [0)3]
8 . 9.
10.
-1 0 X
180
2.3. An Exponential and a Logarithmic Functions,
Exponential and Logarithmic Equations,
Systems of Equations and Inequalities
1. The numbers given in (b), (c), (e), (i), (j), (k), (1) exceed u n ity.
2. (a) y > x ; (b) y > x \ (c) x > y \ (d) x > y . 3. 2*## < 32##. A 2*## =
= (2s)i#o = 8 100, 3200 _ (32)100 _ gioo. consequently, 9 i o o > 8 ioo.
4. (a) 9; (b) In 3; (c) In | a |; (d) 4 log„ | b |; (e) 3; (f) 2; (g) 1; (h) 2;
(i) 0. A oV lo 606 = (aV i5 i^ ) l/V lo e a6 = 6 Vloe 6o t andj hence>
6 V i 5 i ^ _ b l/iog^a'_ 0 . 5 . (a) 3 (1 — c - d); (b) (5 - d)/(2 (c - 2d + e d + 1));
(c) 5c — 6 d — 4. ▲ Let us represent the decimal fraction 0.175 as an
ordinary fraction; 0.175 = 175/1000 = 7/40 = 7/(2M 0). Thus,
log 0.175 = log 7 — 2 log 2 — 1. The problem reduced to finding
log 2 and log 7. We have log 196 = log 2 2 *72 = 2 log 2 + 2 log 7 =
= c (1), log 56 = log 23*7 = 3 log 2 + log 7 = d (2 ). Solving the
system of equations (1) and (2) with respect to log 2 and log 7, we get
log 2 = (2<i — c)l 4, log 7 = (3c — 2d)/4; therefore, log (0.175)4 =
= 4 (log 7 — 2 log 2 — 1) = 5c — 6 d — 4. 6 . A We have
loga 1 8 _ 1 + 2 loga 3
logia 1 8 = and
log 2 12 ~~ 2 + log 2 3
loga 54 _ 1 + 3 loga 3
log 24 54 =
loga 24 — 3 + loga 3 ’
and, therefore, putting loga 3 = a:, we obtain
n+ 1 _ , n+ 1 Tl + 2
tog* > log n+1 or logn (/* + !) —
n > logn+i
------ — n— " """" n + 1
—logn n > logn+i ( n + 2 ) — logn+i ( n + 1), whence we immediately get
l°g„ (» + 1) > log n+1 (n + 2 ), (logn n . = logn+i (n + 1) = 1).
9. A Since 27 > 25, we have log 8 27 > log 9 25. But log 8 27 =
= log2s 3s = loga* 3 2 = log 4 9; consequently, log 4 9 > log 9 25.
10. (a) {5 + lo g , 7}; (b) {8/7}; (c) {0}; (d) {2J ± _ / 7 / 2 } ; (e) {10};
(f) {!>; (g) {1/ / 3 } ; (h) {5}; (i) {0}; (j) {lo g ,., ( 9 / / 8 ) } ; (k) { - 0 .2 ; 3};
181
(1) {3}; (m) {10}; 11. (a) {—1; 1}. ▲ Setting 2* * + 2 = t, we reduce the
original equation to the form t2 — 9* + 8 = 0. Solving this quadratic
equation, we get = 1, t%= 8 . Thus, the original equation is equiva
lent to the collection of the equations 2xt+2 = tx = 1 , 2xl +2 = t2 = 8 .
The first equation has no solutions (x2 + 2 0 for any x 6 IR), the
second exponential equation 2 * * + 2 = 2 3 can be reduced to the quadratic
equation x2 + 2 = 3, whose solutions are = 1 and x2 =■ —1;
(b) { - / 2 ; - 1 ; 1; / 2 ). • Set (c) {20}; (d) { - | } . • Set
183
29. {2}. • Put 2,ogt*<3* 2) = It, 3 >og«:2 (3 * - 2 ) - „ and solve the
equation 3u2 — 5uv + 2u2 = 0 with respect to u (or v). 30. 15 for
a 6 {3}. 31. [1/5; <x>). 32. {1/16} U [4; oo). A If we set j / T —
— | l/a: — 2 | = y, then we can reduce the original equation to the
form log 2 Y v + 6 = log 2 V 2 \ y \ or 2y2 — y — 6 = 0 , whose
roots are yx = 2 and y2 = —3/2. Taking this into account, we have:
(1 ) Y x — | y T — 2 | = yi = 2 =1} / I — 2 = | — 2 | =$>
x > 4; (2) / S T - | J/-T— 2 | = y, = —3/2 =^2 / x = 1/2 =4 >
1/16. Uniting the solutions obtained, we find the answer.
33. (a) {2}. A We establish by means of selection that x = 2 is a
root of the equation. Let us prove that the original equation has no
other roots. We reduce the equation to the form (5/13)* + (12/13)* =
— 1 and assume that it has a solution: x < 2. We consider two expo
nential functions: y* — (5/13)* and y2 — (12/13)*. They are decreas
ing, and, therefore, for the values x < 2 we have (5/13)* > (5/13)2 and
(12/13)* > (12/13)2. Adding these inequalities together, we get
(5/13)* + (12/13)* > (5/13)2 + (12/13)a = 1, and this means that
the given equation does not have roots smaller than 2. We can prove
by analogy that the equation does not have roots exceeding 2; (b) {3};
(c) {0}. • To prove the uniqueness of the solution, investigate the
behaviour of the functions y = 2 * and y = 1 — x on the intervals
(-o o ; 0) and (0; oo); (d) {3}. 34. (a) {(2; 3/2); (b) {(| a |"/»; | a P2/*),
for a *= 0, | * | + 1; (c) {(1/2; 1/2)}. 35. (a) {(9/2, 1/2)}; (b) {8 ; 1}.
36. (a) {(3/2; 1/2)}. # Take logarithms of the second equation of the
system to the base 2; (b) {({/T; - 1 ) ; ({/T; 1)}. 37. (a) {(18; 2); (2; 18)};
(b) {(20; 5)}; (e) {(3; 6 ); (S; 3)}; (d) {(4; - 1 /2 ) } . • Set log, x = u,
4-y =» v; (d) {(0.1; 2); (100; —1)}. • TakeJ logarithms of the second
equation of the system to the base 1 0 ; (f) {(2 ; 1 0 ); (1 0 ; 2 )}; (g) {(2 ; 1 / 6 )};
(h) {(9a/2; a/ 2 ); (a/2 ; 9a/2)} for a 6 (0; 1 ) (J (1; oo). 38. (a) {(2 ; 4); (4; 2 )}.
• In the first equation of the system set log* y =» s; (b) {a2; a); (a; a2)}
for a 6 (0 ; 1 ) U (1 ? oo), {((a + l)2; - ( a + 1 )); ( - ( a + D; (a + I)2)}
for a 6 (—oo; —2 ) (J (—2 ; —1), 0 for a 6 {—2 ; 1 } U C—1; 0].
39. {(3; 9); (9; 3)}. 40. {(3; 2)}. 41. { ( - 2 ; - 2 ) ; (2; 2)}. 42. {(12; 4)}.
43. {(5; 1/2)}. 44. {(64; 1/4)}. 45. {(—2; 4)}. • When solving the system,
take into account that y 6 N- 46. (a) [—1 ; 1 — j/3 ) U (1 + Y%\ 3].
A The original inequality is equivalent to the system of inequalities
r x%— 2x — 2 > 0 ,
\ x%—2x — 2 ^ 1 .
The solution of the first inequality is x £ [—°o; 1 — Y $ ) U
U d + / 3; oo), and of the second, x 6 [—1; 3]. The intersection of
these sets of solutions is the set of values x 6 [—1 ; 1 — 1^3) U
u ( 1 + /S '; 3]; (b)T(2 ; 9); (c) [ - 4 ; - 3 ) (J (0 ; 1 J; (d) (4; 6 );
(e) (-o o ; - 2 ) U (-1 /2 ; oo); (f) [ - 2 ; -2 /3 ); (g) [0 ; 2 - }/2) U
U (2 + / 2 ; 61; (h) (3/4; 4/3). 47.; (a) (-o o ; - 2 .5 ) |J (0; oo);
184
(b) ( - 1 _ / 2 ; - 2 ) U (0; / 2 - 1 ) ; (c) ( - o o ; 2 - / 2 ) U
U (2 + / 2 ; oo); (d) (-o o ; - 2 ) U (5/8; oo); (c) [ - 7 ; - Y 35) U
U [5; 1/35). 48. (a) (2; 7). A Since one and the same number, exceed
ing unity, serves as the base of the logarith is of the left-hand and
right-hand sides of the inequality, the original inequality is equivalent
to the system
( 2*—4 > 0 ,
I * - f - 3 > 2 * — 4,
solving which, we get the answer; (b) (— |/"5; —2) U (1; )/5 ). • The
original inequality is equivalent to the system
r *a+ * —2 > 0,
I *a-J-*—2<C*-{-3;
(1) ( - 1 ; 1) U(3: oo); (d) [(1 — /5 ) /2 ; (1 + /5 ) /2 ] . * Reduce the
ceft-hand side of the inequality to the form log2 (x + I)”1;
(e) ( - 1 ; 1 + 2 / 2 ) . 49. (a) (2; 7) U (22; 27). A The original ine
quality is equivalent to the system
( x — 2 > 0,
< 27-* >0,
I log ( * - 2 ) ( 2 7 -* ) < 2 ,
whic i turn, is equivalent to the system of ineq’ alities
T2<*<27,
10 < ( * - 2 ) (27 — * )< 1 0 0 ,
solving which, we get the answer; (b) (2; 4); (c) (1; 11/10); (d) [—1; 4);
(e) ( - 4 ; - 1 - } /3 ] U (0; / 3 - 1 1 ; (f) (3; 5]; (g) | 2 ; 5);
(h) (-o o ; - 1 ) U (2; oo). 50. (log, 5; oo); (b) ( - 1 ; 7); (c) (1 - / 5 ; - 1 ) |j
U (3; 1 + VT); (d) (-o o ; 0) U (3; oo); (e) (2 ; oo); (f) (-o o ; - 8 ) U
U (4; °°)l (g) [0; oo) for a 6 (—<»; 0), ((o log 8 2 )2; oo) for a 6 [0 ; oo).
51. (a) (0; 10-4J U [10, oo). ▲ Setting log x = t, we get an inequality
+ 3t — 4 ^ 0 , which is equivalent to the collection of inequalities
r t * S —4 r l o g x < — 4,
lt> i, °r L l o g x > l ,
solving which, we get the answer; (b) (0; 1/2) (J [ Y i \ oo). • Set
log, x = f , (c) (0 ; 1 ) U ( / 3 ; 9); (d) (1/16; 1 / 8 ) U (8 ; 16). • Set
log? x = f, (e) (0; 1 / Y 27] U [1/3: /2 4 3 J (J [27; oo). « Set
2 logi x - 3 log, x - 7 = f, (f) (1/16: 1/4) U (1/2; 2); (g) (0; 1/2) U
U (32; oo). 52. (a) T log,J^§ ; oo 1. • Set 2**+* = t > 0;
185
log* (3 + /5 ) /2 ) : (d) ( - 0 0 1 1 - log, f T j . • Set 3*-*- - < > 0 ;
(e) (-o o ; 0 ) U (log, 3; <x>); (1 ) (0 .0 1 ; oo). • Set 3 Ioe * + 2 = t > 0;
(g) (—oo; - 1 ) U (-O .l^ O ). • Set 2l0*<-*> = t > 0 .
53. (a) (log, (5 + / 3 3 ) - 1; oo); (b) ( - o o , 0] U [log, 5; 1);
(c) (log, ( V 2 + 1 ); log, 3). • Set log y ~(5* - 1 ) = t; (d) (-o o ; 0 ) U
U (0; oo). 54. (a) [ 2 ; +oo); (b) [28/3; oo); (c) [log, (83/19); oo).
55. (a) ( - 3 ; - / § ) U ( / 6 ; 3); (b) (-1 /2 ; 2 ). 56. (a) 1 -3 ; 1);
(b) ( - 4 ; ( 1 + Y 17)/2). 57. (a) (0 ; 2 ) U (4; oo); (b) (1 0 0 0 ; oo);
(c) (0; 1/4] U [4; oo). 58. (a) ((1 + / 1 + 4«*)/2; oo) for a 6 (1; oo);
(1; (1 + 'j/'l + 4a2)/2) for a € (0; 1). ▲ It is necessary to consider the
cases a > 1 and 0 < a < 1. If a > 1, then the original inequality is
equivalent to the system
/ « > 1.
I x ( z — l ) > a a.
r * > i,
l a;*—x —a * < 0 .
The right-hand system has solutions x 6 (5; oo), and the second system,
a; 6 (3; 4);funiting these solutions, we get the answer; (b) (1 ; 2 )
60. (a) (0 ; 1 / 2 ) U (1; 2 ) U (3; 6 ); (b) ( - 3 ; - 2 ) U ( - 1 ; 0 ) U (1; 3);’
(c) (-4 /3 ; -2 3/22); (d) ( - 2 ; - 3 /2 ) U [ - 1 ; 3]; (e) (1/5; 1 / 2 ).
61. (a) ( - 3 ; - 1 ) ; (b) (0; ( / l 3 - 3)/2) (j (1; oo). 62. [ - 1 ; 1/2) U
186
u U; 2) U (2; 7/2). 63. (3; 5 - / 3 ) U (7; oo). 64. (a) (1; 2);
(b) (0; 3) u (4; 6) u (6; 12) U (14; ~ ) . 65. (a) (0 ; 4); (b) [ 2 , 4);
(c) (1/2, 4); (d) (1; 2). 6 6 . (a) (0; 2). # Reduce the inequality to the
form (2 X — 1) (25 — 5X) > 0; (b) (1 / |/1T; 1 ) U (3; oo). # Reduce the in
equality to the form ((logs j?— 1 ) ( 2 log5 x + l))/(log 3 x > 0 ; (c) (—1 ; oo).
67. {8 }. • Prove that log0.s ( y (log*5 —1)J < 0 ; (b) {4}. 68 . (0; 1/a4)
for a g (1; oo), (0; a8) for a £ (0; 1). 69. The functions given in (a),
(b), (f) are even, those given in (c), (d), (e), (g), (h) are od4.
70. 3 * = = (3 * + 3 -* )/2 + (3 * -3 -* )/2 . ▲ Suppose /i (s) = / i ( - * ) and
/ > ' * ) = - / • ( - * ) . Then 3» = / i ( * ) + /,( * ) (1), and 3-* = M - * ) +
+ / 2( —x ) = f i ( x ) —f2 (x) (2). Solving the system of equations (1)
73%
75.
76 . 77.
80.
188
81.
82.
84. (a) 3* In 3; (b) I 0 * in l0 ; (c) - ^ - ln j ; (d) e * - e - * ; (e) 2 e * + e -* ;
( a-f-2t = —1,
\ a/ 2 + 4 * ~ - l .
190
Sd.
100 .
2 sin-
2n 4ji . 6ji
(d) cosec a; (e) -^ 1/2. A c o s - y - + c o s -7j — bcos
7
2 sin -
19i
v ^ 2n 4n 6 jx \
X I cos — + cos y —|- cos —y ~ ) =
/ . 3ji . it \ , / . 5n . 3ji \ , / . . 5jx \
^sin — -----sm y J+ ( sin y ----- sm — 1 + ( s i n n — s m — 1
2o sm
• —
n
. —
—sin n
y ; (f) 1. # Reduce the expression to the form
2 sin y
13 . / n \
sinl 4 Sin ( — 14 )
. 8 . (g) A We have 16 sin 10° sin 30° sin 50° X
O• n
2 sm l4
X sin 60° = 16 cos 80° cos 60° cos 40° cos 20° = 8 cos 80° cos 60° cos 40° X
cos 2 0 ° sin 2 0 °
2 2 sin 40° cos 40°
X = 4 cos 80° cos 60° : 2 cos 60° X
sin 2 0 ° sin 2 0 °
2 sin 80° cos 80° i sin 160° sin (180°— 160°)
=1; (h) • Use
~ sin 2 0 ° 2" 2 sin 2 0 ° — sin 2 0 °
the formulas 2 cos2 a = 1 + cos 2 a, 2 sin 2 a = 1 — cos 2 a; (k) $ 1 ±
± sin a == (sin (a/2) ± cos (a/2))2. 9. 1/3. A sina+cosa =
_ 2 ta n (a / 2 ) t 1 — tan 2 (a/ 2 )
= 1.4; Hence we get 2.4 tan2 (a/2) —
1 + tan 2 (a/ 2 ) 1 1 + tan 2 (a/ 2 )
s in ( l ± l ) s i n - | — co« i c e s ( 1 ± V ) = _ C0S g + + Y = 0 ,
192
which is only possible for | i t 'is clear from thi
2 ( ~ cos 10° -
(b) 4. A cosec 10° — j /3 sec 10° =
sin 1 0 ° cos 1 0 °
4 sin (30°-10°) 2 cos 40°—cos 20°
=4; (c) / 3.
~~ sin 2 0 ° ’ v"' r m sin 2 0 °
_ cos 40°—2 sin 30° sin 10° __ sin 50° — sin'10° _ 2 cos 30° sin 20°
~ sin 2 0 ° _ “ sin 2 0 ° ~ sin 2 0 ° Y l;
(d) 4. A —2 Y2. (2 sin 35° sin*10° —sin 5°—2 cos 5° cos 40°) =
= —2 l/ 2 (cos 25° — sin 5° —cos 35° — 2 cos 45°) = —2 /2 ( 2 s in 3 0 ° X
X sin 5° —sin 5° — / 2 ) = 4 ; (e) 3/4. A cos8 73°+ cos 2 47° +
+ co s 73° cos 47° = 0.5 (1+cos 146° + 1 + (cos 9 4 ° + cos 2 6 °)+ cos 120°)**
= 0.5 (3 /2 + 2 cos 60° cos 34° — cos (180° — 146°)) = 1/2-3/2 =- 3/4;
(f) —1/2. A (sin 6 ° —sin 6 6 °)+ (sin 78°- s i n 42°) ~ 2 eos 60° sin 18° —
—2 «os 36° sin 18°
— 2 sin 30° cos 36° = sin 18° — sin 54° = cos 18° *
cos 18°
2 cos 36° sin 36° sin 72° 1
— 2 cos 18° — — 2 cos 18° ~ ~ 2 ’ ^g) (h) ^
(i) 0 . • tan2 20° = ( 1 — cos 40°)/(l + cos 40°); (j) 1/5.
COS4IO8 0 cos 36°
A (cot2 36° cot 2 72°— 1) + 1 = 1 = 1 — (cot 36° X
sin 2 36° sin 2 72°
1 = 1 — cot 2 36° cot2 72°
2 - 2 sin 36°
=1—
X cot 72°)2
cos 36° cos 72° sin 144°
—4 cot2 360.cot2t72°. We have an [equality [cot2 3 6 ° cot2 72° =
= 1 —4 cot2 36° cot2 72° or 5 cot2 36° cot 2 72° = 1, whence we get the
answer. 12. (a) *2/9 + i/2/16 = l; (b) 1/ = 4 —x2; (c) y —x = 1;
(d) z 2 + y2 = 2 .
(
Sx + — J sin = 0 for any
x 6 R. This is evidently possible if sin (3T/2) = 0, i.e. 3T/2 = nn,
n 6 Z. And since we have to find the least positive number T, this
number can be found from the equation 3 Tl2 = n (n = 1); (b) 2jx.
• Represent the function in the form y = (sin x + sin 2a: +
+ sin 5a:)/cos 2a:; (c) 4n; (d) n. • cos2 x = 1/2 + (cos 2a:)/2; (e) 2jx;
(f) n; (g) 70n. 9. • Show that the conditions of the definition of a
periodic function are not fulfilled for this function. 10. {—2, —1; 1, 2}.
11. • Prove that cos Xi ^ *-a sin xa - x±- > 0 for any xlf xt 6
e *»>**•
12. (a)
194
12 . (c)
13* 195
12. (h)
12. (i)
12. (i)
196
12. (k)
13. (b)
ya
1
_ 3 jt _£I_ 3k x
2 2 2 2
197
13. (e)
14. (c)
14. (f)
199
15. (a)
y>i
1
^ — Sn x
15. (b)
16. (a) cos x + sin ®; (b) —(4 cos 2 ®/sin2 2x); (c) sin 2x; (d) —sin 2x;
(e) tan2 * (tan2 x + l)j_ (f) —cot3 x (cot2 x + i); (g) 3 cos 3 x;
(h) (—1l \ / t ) sin ( x l Y 2)5 (i) 2 sin (4® — 2); (j) [—3 cos^ (® 2 + x) X
X sin (® 2 + ®)] (2® + 1); (k) 1/(1 + cos®). 17. (a) / 3 / 2 ; (b) - 2 ;
(c) 3. 18. (a) y — 2 = 0; (b) y — 1/2 = jt/4 — ®; (c) j/ - 1 =
= 4 (® — n/ 8 ). 19. max y = 21; min y = —19. 20. 3/4. ▲ Since
R x€R
/' (a:) = 0 for any x 6 R, it follows that / Or) = const, and the value
of the constant can be found by substituting any value of x, say,
x = 0.
2.6. Inverse T rigonom etric F u n ction s
1. Ja) D (y) - [0, 2]; (b) 7? (?) = [2; 6 ]; (c) D (y) = [ - 1 - / 2 *
V^2 — 1]; (d) D (y) = (—oo; oo); (e) D (y) = (—°o; oo); (f) D (y) =
= (—oo; oo). • To find the domain of definition of the function
y = arc sin / (*) (y = arccos / (®))t solve the inequality I / (s) I < 1 *
2. (a) Z) (y) = (— 0 0 ; 0 0 ); (h) D (y) = [0, 0 0 ); (c) D (y) = (0, 0 0 );
(d) D (y) = (-o o ; 0 0 ). 3. (a) E (y) = [0, jc/2]; (b) E (y) = (ji/2; n];
(c) E (y) = ^0. n/2); (d) E (y) =» fji/4; n). 4. (a) A Setting | x | = t,
where 1 6 1 - 1 : 1 ] and t 6 [0 ; 1 ], we get, by the definition,
sin (arcsin t) = t = | x |; (b) A Suppose arcsin x = a, with
a 6 t—jc/2 ; * / 2 ]. (1 )
Thus, we have to find the value cos a if s in a = x. From the prin
cipal identity sin*a-|-cos2a = l or cos* a = l —x2 we have | cos a | =
*= jA —x1. And since the values of a satisfy condition (1), it
#X)
follow s that cos a = cos (arcsin x) = Y ^ —x*; (c) A Since tan a =
= sin a/cos a , we have tan a = tan (arcsin x) = x / l A —x2 for
x £ ( — 1, 1). 5. (a) 4 } /2 /9 . A Suppose a r c sin -g -= a . Then
-
(b) 2/3; (c) 1/4. 8. (b) A Suppose arctan x = a, a £ ( — j i / 2; jt/2).
Then tan a = x and, taking (1) into account, we find cosa =
= l / l A + tan2 a = l / j / l + x2 from the identity tan* a + 1 = 1/cos2 a.
9. (a) 3/5. A Let us introduce the designation arctan 3 = a, tan a = 3.
Then we get sin (2 arctan 3) = sin 2a = 2 tan a /(l + tan* a) =
= 2-3/(1 + 3*)=3/5; (b) - 3 /4 ; (c) V ( 1 0 - / l 0 ) / 2 0 . A sin(a/2) =
= / ( l —cosa)/2 = V ( i — l / / l + 9 ) / 2 = K ( / l 0 — l)/2 / l 0 =
= K ( 1 0 - /l0 ) /2 0 ; (d) V (2 6 + /2 6 )/5 2 ; (e) 3 / / 1 0 . 10. (b) A Sup-
pose arctan a: = a; cot a = a?. Then tan a = 1/cot a = 1/x.
11. (a) A Assume arcsin x = arccos y (which is possible since
0 < x < 1). Then cos (arccos y) = cos (arcsin x), y = Y 1 Le.
arcsin a: = arccos > /l — x2. 12. (a) arccos (4/5); arctan (3/4);
arccot (4/3); (b) arcsin (5/13); arctan (5/12), arccot (12/5);
(c) arcsin (5/13); arccos (12/13); arccot (12/5); (d) arcsin (4/5);
arccos (3/5): arctan (4/3). 13. (a) A We set arcsin (—x) = a , a £
6 [—jt/2; Jt/2]. Then we have sin a = —x or —si:: a = sin (—a) = x,
whence it follows that —a = arcsin x or a = arcsin (—x) =
■■ —arcsin x; (c) A Assume arccos (—x) = a, a 6 [0; it]. Then
cos a = —x or —cos a = cos (n — a) = x. Since 0 ^ n — a ^ ji,
we have n — a = arccos x, i.e. a = arccos (—x) = n — arccos x.
14. (a) n — arcsin (2 }/2/3); ji — arctan 2 l/T ; arccot (— ^ 2/4);
n — arccot (j/2/4); ji — arccos (1/3); (b) arcsin (—7/25);
—arccos (24/25); —arccot (24/7); —arctan (7/24); (c) n — arcsin (24/25);
201
arccos (—7/25); n — arctan (24/7); n — arccos (7/25); n — arccot (7/24).
15. (a) ▲ Since 0 < : r < l , 0 < y < l , i t follows that 0 ^ arcsin x <
^ n/2; 0 ^ arcsin y ^ n/2 and 0 ^ arcsin x + arcsin y ^ n. There
fore, we can write the equation arcsin x + arcsin y = arccos a,
whence we have cos (arcsin x + arcsin y) = cos (arccos z), a =*
= / l — x2 Y i — y2 — xy; (d) ▲ Since 0 < arccos x < ji/2 and
—n/2 < —arccos y < 0, we have —n/2 < arccos x — arccos y <
^ n/2 and we can write the equation arccos x — arccos y = arcsin a.
Hence it follows that sin (arccos x — arccos y) — sin (arcsin z) or
* = y y i — x2 — x y i — y2; (h) ▲ We have x > 0, y > 0 and,
therefore, 0 < arccot a: < n/2, 0 < arccot y < n/2, 0 < arccot x +
+ arccot y < n, and we have an equation arccot a: + arccot y =
— arccot z or cot (arccot x + arccot y) = cot (arccot z). Using the
formula cot (a + P) = (cot a cot P — l)/(cot a + cot P), we obtain
z = (xy — l)/(a: + y). 16. (a) arccos (—16/65); (b) arccos (—3/5);
(c) arccot (— 19/9); (d) — arcsin (3/5); (e) — arcsin (36/325);
(f) —arctan (1/21); (g) —arctan (1/21). 17. (a) A We introduce the
designation arcsin x + arccos x = a . Since —n/2 < arcsin x ^ n/2,
0 < arccos x < n, we have —n/2 ^ a ^ 3n/2; since sin a =
= sin (arcsin x + arccos x) = xx + y i — x2 y 1 — x2 — 1, it fol
lows that a = n/2; (b) suppose arctan x + arccot x = P; since
—n/2 < arctan x < n/2, 0 < arccot x < n, it follows that —n/2 <
< P < 3n/2. Since sin p = sin (arctan x + arccot x) = x2/(l + x2) +
+ 1/(1 + x2) = 1, we have p = n/2. 18. (a) {1/2}; (b) {1}; (c) {1}-
19. k — 2; {(cos (n2/4); 1); (cos (n2/4); —1)}. 20. max1**/ (a;) —
l-l'A V
— (—1) — 7ns/8; min f (x) = / (1/2) = n8/32. A Since arcsin * +
[-l;U
+ arccos x n/2, we can, putting arccos x =» f, reduce the original
function to the form 4 ^ 3 f 2 — nt + The function f (t)
202
22. (o) 22. (d)
2 3. (a)
23. (b)
203
23. fc)
2 3 . (d)
204
25. (a) Suppose f (x) =* sin #. Then, by the formula for the derivative
of the inverse function gf (*) =■ (B (z) ■* arcsin x)% we find
(b) the proof is similar to that carried out in (a); (c) suppose / (ar) =
= tan x, g (a:) = arctan x; we have
(arctan x)' =
f (arctan J) = cos!i(arctaPj)
1______ _ 1
tan2 (arctan a:)+ l — l + a:2 *
(d) the proof is similar to that carried out in (c). 26. (a) —1 / } / 2 x —x2;
(b) —l / / l —(*+2)*; (g) 1/ - 2 / / l ~ 4 x 2; (d) arcsin a:+
a:+(arccosa:) V —a?2 . m ________ JX________
-\-x! / l —a;2; (e)
a:2 Y i — a;2 * 2 (arccos x)2 —a:2
(g) 2x/(i + x*)-, (h) —(2* In 2)/(l + 4*); (i) cos x! | cos a: |
(j) - ! / ( ( ! + *) / 2 * ( 1 - * ) ) . 27. (a) 4; (b) 3 / 2 ; (c) 1.5; (d) 0.8
28. (a) y = 15a:/4 — 3/4 + arcsin (3/5); (b) y = a:/4 + 1/2 — jx/4.
29. (a) {0}; (b) {0}. ▲ The given function is differentiable at any point
x £ R and, therefore, only those values of x0 at which y' (a:0) = 0 can
be its critical points. Differentiating, we get y' (a:) = arctan x +
+ xl( 1 + x2). The equation arctan x + xl( 1 + x2) = 0 has the unique
solution x = 0 (the function © (a?) = y' (x) being odd and assuming
only positive values for all x > 0). 30. max y = y (0) = jx/4;
[0;i]
min y = y (1) = 0.
[0;l]
_2jm
_ ± _1 arccos_ 1_ ngzj-; (e) {jin + n/4; 2nn ±
«{<?*
jr/3 | n 6 Z}. 9. (a) {jui + (-1 )* + * Ji/6 | n 6 Z}; (b) {2nn ± jr/3 | * €
6 Z}; (c) {nn + (—l)n arcsin (2/3) | n £ Z}; (d) {2jx» ± 2n/3 | n 6 Z};
(e) {jx (5n + 2)j+ ji/2; 5jtw | n 6 Z}; (f) {nn, 2nn + n/6 j n 6 Z}.
10. (a) {nn + n/4; nn + arctan 3 | n 6 Z}; (b) {nn — arctan (1/2);
nn + arctan 2 | n 6 Z}; (c) {nn + n/6; nn + n/3 | n 6 Z};
(d) {nn + 3n/4; nn + arccot 2 | n 6 Z). 11. (a) {nn + ( - l ) w+* i | n6
6 Z>; (b) (nn + ( - l ) n n/4 | n 6 Z}; (e) {2nn + arctan (1/2) | n 6 Z).
▲ Using the formulas for the logarithms of a product and a quotient,
we reduce the equation to the form
_________ 3 sin a;________
logi 1 or 3 tan * = 2 (1 — tan* z ) .
cos a: (1— tan z ) (1 + tan z )
Solving now the equation with respect to tan z , we obtain (tan x ) t =
=* —2 and (tan s ) , =* 1/2. Since, as a result of the transformations,
we have obtained an equation which is not equivalent to the given
equation, verification must be carried out. Only those values of z can
be solutions of the original equation for which the following system of
inequalities is consistent:
sin z > 0,
{
cos z > 0,
1 —tan £ > 0 ,
1 + ta n * > 0 .
The solutions of the equation tan z = —2 do not satisfy the inequal
206 1 + tan z > 0 o f the system and are, therefore, extraneous.
ity
The equation tan x = 1/2 has solutions x = n k + arctan (1/2),
k £ Z. Verifying them by means of the substitution into the inequal
ities sin x > 0 and cos x > 0, we find that the inequalities hold for
k = 2/i, n £ Z.
12. (a) {n n /2 + n /8 | n£Z}; (b) arcsin2(2— |^3) | n £ z j ;
1— l / l + 4 a 2
zb arccos n£Zj[ for a # 0, {nn + n/2 | n £ 21} for
2a
a — 0. 14. (a) jn /2 + 2nn | n £ — N; y ; —Ji/2 + 2nm | m £ N J .
▲ After the simplest transformations, the given function can be
represented in the form f (x) = 2 cos x — \ 2x — 3 | + e 3 — 2. It
can be seen that it is differentiable everywhere except for the point
x = 3/2, i.e. this point is critical. We have f (x) = 2 cos x + 2x +
+ e3 — 5 for x < 3/2, f (x) = 2 cos x — 2x+ e3 + 1 for x :> 3/2.
We can find other critical points by differentiating the function and
equating the derivative to zero (taking the inequality into account);
(b) {(jt/2 + 2im )/6 | m = 1, 0, —1, —2, . . 2; j (—n/2 + 2nn)
I n = 3, 4. T, . . .}; (c) {n (2n + l)/2 j n £Z}; (d) {2nn ± 3n/4 | n £
6 Z}. ▲ The given function is differentiable at every point belonging
to the interval (—oo; oo). Differentiating the function and equating
the derivative to zero, we get an equation 2 cos2 x + ( l / 2 - 2 / 5 ) X
X cos x — iO = 0. Hence we obtain cos x = (the set of solu
tions of this equation is empty) and cos x = —2/ ]/~2-=^ x = 2nn ±
± 3n/4; n € Z ; (e) { ( - l ) n+1-£ + nn | n 6 Z }. 15. (a) { ji (2n + 1)
| n 6 Z}. ▲ Taking into account that 2 cos2 (x/2) = 1 + cos x, we
reduce the equation to the form cos3 x + cos2 x — 2 (cos x + 1) = 0
or (cos x + 1) (cos2 x — 2) = 0. Thus we have two equations: 1 +
+ cos x = 0, whose solution is —x = 2nn + n, n £ Z, and cos2 a: —
— 2 = 0, which has no solutions; (b) {nn + ji/2; 2n/i ± n/3; 2nn zb
± (n — arccos (2/3)) | n £ 2}; (c) {nn — n/4; nn zb n/3 | n 6 Z }.
• Make use of the identity 1/cos2 x — 1 = tan2 a: and reduce the
equation to the form (tan x + 1) (tan2 x — 3) = 0; (d) {2nn; 2nn ±
zb 2n/3; 2nn zb arccos ((—1 zb Yf>)!b)\ n £ Z}. 16. (a) {nn + arctan5
| n £ Z}. ▲ The two sides of the equation do not vanish simultaneous-
207
y tor any x| dividing the vquation by cos x, we get an equation
sin x/cos • ■» tan * = 5, which is equivalent to the given equation.
The solutions oi the latter equation can be found from the formula
x e= nn + arctan 5f n £ Z; (b) {nn + ax/4 | n £ Z}; (c) {nn — Jt/4
| n £ Z}; (d) {2jiw — Jt/4; 2jin -j- ji/2 | rc £ Z}; (e) {nn + ji/2; nn +
+ arctan (1/4) | n £ Z}; 17. (a) {nn + Jt/4; 2jt» dh 2ji/3 | n 6 Z};
(b) {jt/i + arctan 2 | n £ 2); (c) {2ji/2; jirc + ji/4 | n £ Z}; (d) {jit* —
— Jt/4; ji» | n £ Z}; (e) {nn + ji/4 | n £ 2). • Reduce the right-hand
side of the equation to the form (cos x — sin x)2 + cos2 x — sin2 x.
18. (a) {nn — ji/4; nn — arctan 2 | n £ Z}. A Since sin x and cos x
do not vanish at the same value of x, we can divide the equation by
cos2 x. We get an equation
tan2 x + 3 ♦an x + 2 =* 0 (1)
which is equivalent to the original quation. From (1) we get equations
tan x = —1 and tan x = —2, whose solutions can be found from
the familiar formulas; (b) { n n + ji/4; n n — arctan (1/4) | n £ Z};
(c) {jtn + n/4: n n + arctan (3/5) | n £ Z}; (d) {nn + arctan 2;
n n — arctan (3/4) | n £ Z). • Represent the right-hand side of the
equation in the form —2 (sin2 x + cos2 x); ^e) {nn — n/4; nn +
+ arctan 5 | n £ Z}. 19. (a) { n n — arctan f/"4 | n £ Z}; (b) (nn —
— n/4; nn ± Jt/3 | n £ Z}. A We transform the right-hand side of
the equation as follows: 3 sin x (cos x — sin x) + 3 *= 3 sin x X
X cos x — 3 sin2 x + 3 (sin2 x + cos2 x) =* 3 cos x (sin x + cos x), We
have got an equation sin2 x (1 + tan x) = 3 cos* x (1 4* tan x), oi
(1 + tan x) (tan2 x — 3) = 0, whose solution reduces to that of the
equations tan x =* —1, tan x = y^3 and tan x =* — j /3 , (c) {nnl2 | n£
£ Z}. • Represent the right-hand side of the equation in the form
1 =» (sin2 x + cos2 x)2 = sin4 x + 2 sin2 x cos2 x + cos4 x; (b)
{jin/2 | n £ Z} for a = 0; {jirc + arctan gS
208
except for n = l + 3m, 2 j ; (b) 0 ; (c) {jxn|tt£ Z}. A The origi
nal equation is equivalent to the equation
2 (tan 3a: — tan 2a:) = tan 2a: (1 + tan 3a: tan 2a:). (1)
Now we seek the values of x for which 1 + tan 3a: tan 2a: = 0. The
last equation is equivalent to the equation cos x! (cos 2a: cos 3a;) = 0.
It turns out that this equation has no solutions since if cos x = 0,
then cos 3a; = 0 as well. Consequently, equation (1) can be divided
by 1 + tan 3a: tan 2a: 0; we have
tan 3a:—tan 2a:
= tan 2a;, or 2 tan x
2 1 + tan 3a: tan 2a:
2 tana;
or tana;= 0,
1 — tan2 a: 1
Solving the equation tan x = 0, we get x = nn, n f Z , and after
verifying that the conditions x nk/2 + ji/4 and x nk!3 + ax/6t
k 6 Z are satisfied, we find that x = nn, n 6 Z, is a solution of the
original equation; (d) {90°n + 25° \ n £%}. 23. (a) (2 nn \ n 6 Z}.
• Use the identity sin x = 2 tan -|7(1 + tan2 -|-); (b) {2:in —
14-01521 209
+ f ) “ Bin( * - T " - f ) =sin ( t ~ t ) and sin ( ! + ! * ) =
. / rt 3 \ . 0 in x \ , . x Ji
= sin y — 2 ~ x j = sm 3 and s e t y —y = y .
x l/4 a 4 -5 _1
tion cos -^- = *2 has solutions x = 4 ji» dh 2 arccos - ---------- ,ugZ,
for a £ [ — 5/4; 5]. Taking into consideration that equation (2) has
two solutions on the interval [ —5/4; 1], we get the answer;
(b) {nn\n£%} for a £ (0,1/3), |n /i, nn dt -i- arccos ” 2 ~ Jn 6
I __g 1
nn, jiti ± "2 "arccos — ; jx« db arccos X
210
+ arctan - ~ | n £ zj> for c2 < a 2-|-&2, 0 for c2 > a 2+ 62. ^ Since
14* 211
+arctan- (b) |2jim ± arccos - | n g Zj for a£
(g) { jim /2 ; 2 jim ± 2 j i/ 3 |m £ ^}; (b) |-y -(2 M + l)lw £ Z, except for m=
37. {jim/4+ji/8; jim ± ji/3 | n 6 %}. 38. (a) {jim | n 6 %}; (b) |n6 .
s in x sin3a: \ , sin2a? sin2a: sin2a:
( cos x cos 3a: / cos 2a? cos 2a:
sin 2a: (cos x cos 3a?—cos 2a:)
cos x cos 3a:
— tana: tan2a:tan3a:= 0 .
cos x cos 2a:*cos 3a:
213
Solving the equation, we find that = nn, n £ 7 ; x2 = -g-> m 6
and £3 = xtZ/3, Z£ Z. The equation £ = nl/S is a consequence of the
equation x = nn and the equation x = nml2 (for m = 2p, p £ ^).
The odd values of m yield extraneous solutions. Thus we have x =
= jm/3, n £ 7, 39. (a) {nnl10 | n £ 7 }. A The original equation is
equivalent to the equation (cos 3£ + cos 9£)/2 = (cos 3£ + cos ll£)/2
or cos 9£ — cos l l £ = 0. Transforming the difference of the cosines
of two angles into a product, we get an equation 2 sin x sin 10£ = 0,
which yields solutions x = nk, x = jtn/10, k, n £ 7. Taking into
account that the solutions of the first equation are also solutions of
the second (for k = lOn), we get the answer;
2 sin --- sin x + 2 sin --- sin 2 £ + 2 sin — sin 3£ = cos -g-
and transform the left-hand part using the formula 2 sin a sin P =
= cos (a — P) — cos (a + P); (b) {2nnl7 | n £ 7 , except for n = Ik,
k £ 7). • Multiply the equation by 2 sin ~ . 42. (a) - + (— l)n+1 ^
214
side of the equation into a sum of trigonometric functions:
f • 1 sin 3a;
= y (2 sin a; cos 2a;+ sin x) —y (sin 3a;—sin a;+ sin a;)= — ^— .
1 1
Solving now the equation sin 3a; = y 4 = y , we get the answer;
(b) (2jm/3 ± 2ji/9|n £ %)\ (c) {jin/3—Jt/9|n £ %}. 44. (a) {jin; jin ±
±Ji/6|n£!Z }; (b) {nn, jin ± jt/61n £ 1); (c) |jin ± y X
215
I n £ ^ j. • Reduce the equation to the form 1/sin x + 1/cos x =
= —2 /|/2 f (sin x + cos x) and set sin x + cos x = y\
(c) | 2 j t n + — 2jirc-)——- jt; 2jtn — -j~ n | n £ ; (d) {2nn; 2jim +
216
Since sin (5x14) < 1, cos x < 1, for equation (1) to hold it is neces
sary that the equations cos x = 1 and sin (5rr/4) = 4 hold simulta
neously. Thus we have a system of equations
f x = 2nk,
\ 5a;/4 = ji/2+2jtJ,
where k, I are some integers. Excluding x from the system, we arrive
h_i
at an equation 4^ = 5A: — 1, or I = k + . The last equation
has an integer solution if (k — l)/4 = n, n £ 7 . We finally get:
k = 4n + 1, n £ 7, and x = 2n (4n + 4); (b) {nn/3; 2nn — xc/2 | n £
6 Z). ______
52. (a) |jtn — arctan - i - ; nn — arctan — I” ” } - • / a h - 1-
jr Oji "1
r 2nn— ; 2jtn-|— I.
* V "2+cos 2 a r+ l/^ sin 2a; = 2|cos (x—jt/6)|. 53. (a) {jin ± Ji/6|re£7).
A Only those values of x can he solutions of the given equation for
which cos 2x > —4/4. Squaring the equation and performing trans
formations, we get an equation 8 cos2 2x + 40 cos 2x — 7 = 0,
which yields: cos 2x = —7/4 and cos 2x = 4/2. The equation cos 2x =
= —7/4 has no solutions, and the solution of the second equation is
a solution of the original equation (cos 2x = 1/2 > — 4/4); (b) {2jtn +
+ arctan a | n £ 7} for a £ (0; oo) {jt (2n -j- 4) + arctan a \ n £ 7}
for a £ (— oo; 0), {nn | n £ 7) for a = 0. 54. (a) 1 2nn + n| n£7
2i7
jt 2 5 1
56. (a) {2 n n + -g -; “3 "Jl^+"jg"JC except for J= 3m + 2,
x ( - i ) !)h ^ } ■«[✓ ?. « -
<1 $ [ / 5 / 6 ; (2 y l + / 3 ) / / 6 ] - 58. (a) {2nn + arccos( l / 3 ) \ n ( Z } .
A. Having transformed the right-hand part of the equation
(b) { ( n ( « + - § - ) + T ; ; (“ (t + ”) + J ;
218
2nfc+-— - j ; ^2nn — ; 2jtfc-(--^-) ; ^2nre+-^-; 2nk+
X arctan —j— ) |
?2Q
interval x£ (0; Jt/2). 33. |jin ; nn ± y arccos ^— ^ ^ 2 ^ ^” ) [ ” €
for a€(0; ji/6] U [5ji/6; 4), { n n \ n ^ 1 } for a£(jt/6, 5ji/6). 34.
| nn, n n ± ~ arccos —— ■a ■| Z | for £ —1; y- J f
Chapter 3
1.60 km/h. 2. 2 km/h. 3.60 km/h. 4 .3 9 ^ km. 5. 4 km/h. 6.40 km/h, 120
km/h. 7.36 or 64 km/h. 8 .2 0 km/h, 12 km/h. 9.1 km/h. 10.30 km, 6 km/ht
4 km/h. ▲ Suppose 5 is the required distance, vx and u2 are the speeds
of the persons travelling from points A and B respectively. The dis
tances covered by the two people in equal time intervals are related as
their speeds. Proceeding from this fact, we get a system of equations
5 — 12 vx 1 2 + 5 — 6 _ vx
12 v%9 5 —12 + 6 “ v2 “
Excluding v1/v2 from these equations, we get an equation 5 2 — 30* 5 =
= 0, whence we find that 5 = 30. The speeds of the travellers can
be found from the equations 5 + 6 = 6 1 ^, 5 — 6 = 6 i>a. 11. 8 a km,
I? km/h, I? km/h. 12. 10 km. 13. 18 km/h. 14. I (tJtx + 1) cm;
00 on
222
11. 40 m, 25 m. 12. 45 metres of black fabric, 36 metres of green fabric
and 30 metres of blue fabric. 13. 50 m3/min. 14. 4.8 h; 4.8 h or 4 h;
6 h. 15. 15 h. A Suppose * is the time period for which the second
valve was open, p± and ps are the speeds of water flow through the
first and the second valve respectively. Then we have a system
Pi (* + 5) + Ps* = 425> 2Pix = P* (* + 5), (pi + Pi) 17 = 425.
From the second and the third equation we get
*+5 50*
Pi = 25 ■
3*+5
Pi- 3 * + 5
Substituting these expressions into the first equation, we find 3*2 —
— 41* — 60 = 0, whence it follows that * = 15 (* = — 4/3
is an extraneous root). 16. 2 h. 17. 6 h. 18. 10 min. 19.
(2 (30p - 1950))/(434 - Ip) kg, (5 (30p - 1950))/(434 - 7p) kg.
The problem has a solution for 62 < p < 65. 20. (4q — 280)/(90 — q)
2
litres. The problem has a solution for 70 < q < 76 ~ . 21. 25%.
o
22. 749 monetary units. 23. 0.25 litre of glycerin, 1.75 litres of water.
24. a%. 25. 12p/(4a2 — 7a + 3)%; 12a2p/(4a2 — 7a + 3)%,
12ap/(4a2 — 7a + 3)%. 26. 64; 46. 27. 63. 28. 863. 29. 36; 63.
(- z ir + T h -) s-10' t [ T E + r + T s b r H 7
Since S/v = 24 and * > 1, the transformations lead to a system of
inequalities, which is equivalent to the original system:
5x2 — 24* — 5 < 0, 1.96*2 — 9.6* — 1 > 0.
223
This system is con sistent for x = 5. Then we obtain
As in the first case, there are no natural x here which can satisfy
the system of inequalities. Thus, only one case is possible, when
4 25
x = 5f y = 11. 12. 5 y min. 13. y m8/h. A Suppose S is the volume
224
of the reservoir (5 > 0), then
, 0.35 . 0.75
W “ 30+ (30 — 3i;)'+'3 0 + (3 0 - 3 y )+ ( 3 0 + 10y)
_ S I i ■ 7 \
~ 10 V 20— y ^ 9 0 + 7 y ) '
We find the derivative of the function t (v):
, 5 ; 1 49 \ „ . , . , 25
1 {V)~ 10 [ (20— y) 2 (9 0 + 7y)2 ) ’ * ( y ) - ° f° r v ~ 7 »
■ y 6 ( 1 , ’ 10);
at the point v = 25/7 the derivative changes sign (at the point on
the left the values of the derivative are negative and on the right
they are positive) and, therefore, at the point u = 25/7 the function
t (v) has a minimum. 14. 6 km/h. # Determine whether the function
t (v) = 6 /y + 2/3 + 0.25i> (2/3 + 6 /®), v >» 0, where t (v) is the full
time of the travel of the pedestrian, has an extremum. 15. 0 litres
if p 6 (20; 100]; [0, 3] litres if p 6 {20}; 3 litres if p 6 (0; 20). 16. 62.5
and 55%. A Suppose we have taken x kg of the first alloy, y kg of
the second and z kg of the third. Since the resulting alloy contains
15% of bismuth, we have an equation 3a; + y — 3z = 0, with z =£ 0
and z ^ x. The percentage of lead in the new alloy is equal to
i / __ %
t . K ll# + 1 0 y + 1 4 z 5 44z —19# 5 z
p(*>=5 x+y+z .... a - , = r - ^ T »
0< —<1.
The function p (x/z) assumes the greatest and the least value at the
end-point of the interval: for xlz = 0 and for xlz = 1. 17. 0 m/s2,
4
Chapter 4
^d) —■cos ^10a:+ -^-j + C. 12. (a) 4sin a:+ C ,; (b) C — 10 sin — ;
x sin 2 a:
(c) 2 s i n ( | ~ f y )+C-> (d) - s i n ( 7 x - l ) + C .1 3 .( a )
^ . 9 1 —cos 2 a; /ux sin 4 r . _ , v 1
• sin 2 a: = ----- ; (b) - a : ------ 7 -----h C\ (c) ~ sin 4a:+
— sin 6 a: + C 2 cos x cos 5a: = cos 4a:+cos 6 a:; (d) -g- sin 3a:—
o
1 1 1 1
— jjs in lla : + C ; (e) — cos 5a:—jjC O slla:+ £; (f) Jq cos 10a:—
226
1 %
— 12 cos ^2*+ 14. (a)-^-tan4x+<?; (b) - 4 c o t-|- + <?; ( c ) t a t lx -
—x + C . • Use the identity 1 + tan* x = l/cos 2 x; (d) C — c o tx —x.
15. (a) x3 —2x. A F ( x ) = j (3x2 —2) d x = x 3 —2x+ C . We have
F(2) = 23 —2*2+C = 4, whence we get C = 0; (b) s+sina;-}-
+ (1/2) sin 2x + 1; (c) 3 sin x + 2 cos x — 2; (d) 2e* / 2 + 1.
16. (a) arcsin2#, (b) sin 8 x j / l + s 4. 17. (a) { — 4, 1}. • /'(«) =
= x ( x + l ) ( x + 2 ) ( x + 3 ) - 2 4 ; (b) { ™ + - J - | b 6 Z «} ; (c) { ^ + - | ;
2. (a) (b) 18; (c) 90; (d) 8 ; (e) ; (f) 4.5. 3. (a) 4.5; (b) 4;
15* 227
(this follows from the solution of the equation i lx = l/( 2 x — 1 )). Let
us consider the possible cases of location of the curve x = a: 1 / 2 <
< a < l , l < a < 2 and a > 2. (1) If 1/2 < a < 1, then the area of
the figure (see the figure) is equal to the sum of the areas of the fi
gures EOiF and AOiB:
or
2 /3 1 a2
In In (1 )
/ 5 2 2a—1 *
The right-hand side of equation (1 ) is the area of the curvilinear
5a2 — 24a + 12 = 0; (2 )
al = (12 — 2 /2 1 )/5 , a, = (12 + 2 /2 1 ) /5 . We find that the condi
tion 1 / 2 < a < 1 is fulfilled only by the root a19
(2) Under the conditions 1 < a < 2, the straight line x = a does
not exist (it is established that in the case 1 / 2 < a < 1 , the area of
the given figure is larger than the area of the curvilinear triangle AOB).
(3) In the case a > 2, the area of the given figure is equal to the
area of the figure A BCD:
228
Alter integrating the right-hand side of the resulting equation and
transforming it, we obtain 15a2 — 128a + 64 = 0; a 8 = 8 , a4 =
= 8/15. The value of a4 does not satisfy the inequality a > 2 and is,
therefore, extraneous. Thus, the condition of the problem is satisfied
by the values a 6 {(12 — 2 /2 1 )/5 ; 8 }. 19. (a) log 3 e; (b) log 4 e;
(c) (30 - 8 In 2 )/In 2 ; (d) 8 ( 1 — 1/(81 In 3)).
20. (a) 2e8 + 1; (b) (e8 - 4)/e4; (c) 33/2 + e-*;
(d) e 2 — 2. 21. 360/(ln 3) — 162. • To find the values of k and m,
solve the system of equations
k + m = 34, 3 + m = 14.
e4
22. 4 log 6 -gy • • To find the coefficient 6 , solve the equation
229
The area of the curvilinear trapezoid A B D O can be found by integrat
ing the function x = e^ in the limits from 0 to In 2 (the ordinates of
the points 0 and A respectively):
In 2
Sa b d o = $ e»dy = eln 2 - l = l .
o
We finally have I = 2 In 2 — 1. 29. jt/2 — 1.
A The value of the integral is equal to the
area S of the hatched figure (see the figure).
We find that area:
J t/2 Jt/2
l d y — ^ sinydi/ = -5 -----1 .
o o
Chapter 5
5.1. Progressions
1. No, it is not. • Show that the equation 1 + 4 (n — 1 ) = 10091 has
no integer solutions. 2 . 13. 3 . 99270. 4 . 16, 12, 8 , . . ., — 16, —20.
ASuppose is the first term of the progression, d is its common differ
ence. We derive a system of equations:
( «i + 0a+ • • • + 0n-2 + 0n-i = O>
< 0 2 + 0 3 + • • • + fl7l-l + flM= —36,
V 0 1 0 — 0 6 = — 16.
From the third equation we have (ax + 9d) — (ax + 5d) = —16; d =
= —4. Subtracting the second equation of the system from the first,
we get ax — an — 36 or —d (n — 1) = 36, — (—4) (n — 1) = 36 and
n = 10. To find we transform the left-hand side of the first equation:
x+y+z = 0.6 (1 ) = ;
\ x ' z y •
(l/z; l/i/; 1 /z here are the consecutive terms of the progression.) Sub-
tracting the third equation of the system from the second, we get
y = 1/6. Substituting this value of y into the first and the second equa
tion of the system, we obtain a system
f x + z = 4/9,
I (* + * )/(« ) = 1 2 ,
whose solutions can be found by means of the substitution z = 4/9 — x
into its second equation. 13. —3a /j/2 8 , —2a/1^28, —a /j/2 8 , . . .;
3 a //2 8 , 2 a //2 8 , a / j / 2 8 ,. . . . 14. { ± / 2 5 6 — 9/4} for 6 6 [1; oo).
▲From the hypothesis we have a system of equations
f 02«12 = 1 *
\ *4010 =
Since a7 = ax + 6 d, it follows that ax = a7 — 6 d and we can reduce
the system obtained to the form
r (a7 - 5 d ) ( a 7 + 5 d ) = l, / a?-25d* = l,
I (a7 — 3d) (a7 + 3d) = 6 \ a? —9d2 = 6 ,
whence we find that d2 = ( 6 — 1)/16 and af = (256 — 9)/16; a 7 =
= dz Y 256 — 9/4. Since the inequalities d2 > 0, a? ^ 0 must be
satisfied, the following inequalities must hold true simultaneously:
6 — 1 > 0 (1) and 256 — 9 > 0. (2)
Solving the system of linear inequalities (1 ) and (2), we find that 6 6
£ [1; oo). For other values of the parameter 6 , the system of equations
has no real solutions, i.e. there is no arithmetic progression whose
terms are real numbers. 15. (116fc — 39)/90 for k £ L—6 , 3/21. '16.
(34 - 296)/10 for 6 6 [1? 9/41. 17. —(p + q). 18. 6 .
231
relation:
(ai + asn) 3m # a\ + an __ 3 (a i-fg 3w)* 2a ^ d (3W—1) _
2 2 Q’ii+i"\~Q'2n 2gi-f-d (n-\“2n — 1)
19. —1; 0; 1; 2. A Suppose a — d, a, a + d and a + 2d are the required
numbers. We assume that the progression is increasing. Then we have
an equation, which we solve for a:
( a - d ) * + a * + ( a + d)* = (a+2d), 3a2 - a + 2 d 2 - 2 d = 0 ;
a = ( l ± /- 2 4 < f * + 2 4 d + l) /6 . (1)
Real solutions exist if
1 2 -/1 6 8 . 1 2 + /1 6 8
— 24ds —24<f+l > 0 or
------ 24----- ----------------24------ *
There are only two integers in this interval, 0 and 1. We reject 0 since,
by the hypothesis, all the required numbers are different. For
d = 1 we find from (1 ) that a = 0 , a — d = —1 ; a + d = + 1 , a +
+ 2d = 2. 20. 13. 21. (npl2) (1 + np). 22. 2.4. 23. ax = 8 , q = 2.
24. 39 or - 1 0 .5 . 25. ± 4 . 26. 2, 6 , 18, . . .; 18, 6 , 2, . . . . 27. / J 7 B
28. 12lq100. 29. Sj Sx. A By the hypothesis we have a system
+ • • •+ fl999= ^l»
a2"i~a4+ • • •4- ®1000= £*•
We multiply the denominator by the common ratio q of the progres
sion:
<*10 + «30 + • • • + 09 9 9 0 = a2 + «4 + • • • + 01000 = ^ 10*
Solving then the equation S 2 = Stq, we get the answer. 30. ±:lY S 2/Sf.
31. 6 . A Suppose at is the first term of the progression, q is its common
ratio and n is the number of the terms. Then we have a system of equa
tions
<*1+ ai0n“1= 66,
{ ^ - 1 = 128,
•* / / - f > ^126,
(1-0)
Multiplying the first equation of the system by a* and taking into
account that d?qn~x = 128, we get a? — 6 6 «i + 128 = 0; (aj)! = 64
and (ai)* ■■ 2. Furthermore, we find from the second equation that
(0 n~*)i = 1/32 and (0 W” X) 2 = 32. Since qn = (g*1-1) 0 , we can substi
tute the values of a± and gn“* we have obtained into the third equation
of the system and find the common ratio of the progression g* = 1 / 2 ,
q2 — 2. The progression being increasing, the common ratio qt is
extraneous. Solving now the equation 2n~x = 32 = 25, we get the
answer. 32. 600 m/min. A Suppose vv v2 and’ i>3 (m/minjr’are, respec
tively, the speeds of the first, tne second and the third skater. It follows
232
from the hypothesis that v3 <. vx <. v2, i.e. vf = v2v3. Furthermore,
we have a system of equations
f i;2f = i>if+400t
\ vt t = v9 ( t + 2/3),
where t is the time during which the second skater ran a circle more
than the first. Excluding t from these equations, we get (i>2 — i>i) v9l
!(vi ~ v3) — viv3)l(vi — v3) = "1 = 600. 33. • S3n — Sn =
~ an+ f + fln + 2 + . • • + fl2n = « n + l (1 — qwV ( l — $)» S 3n —
— S2n = a2n+j (1 — gw)/(l — g). 34. t/2 /3 . 35. 1029/38. A Suppose
the sequence a*, a2, . . ., an, . . ., is a geometric progression. We
shall show that the sequence a£, • • •> • • •» * 6 is also a
geometric progression. Indeed, since ai+i = a^g, i 6 N» it follows that
= and af+ 1 /a|=gfc = const,
independent of the ordinal number of the term i of the progression.
Thus, the sequences of the squares and the cubes of the terms of an
infinitely decreasing progression are also infinitely decreasing progres
sions. We therefore, have a system of equations
7/2,
1 -9
af
{ 1—9* 147/16,
+ AB + A A i = 4i + 3 j + 12k; consequent- z {L
ly, \ACi | = Y 42 + 3 a+ 1 2 2 = 13 and N
m 1= — AC—AB,
c m 2= — a b -~a c .
Multiplying scalarly the two last vector equalities and taking into
account that AB_\_AC, we find
BM1-DM2
cos ^
BMX | | DM2 |
28. 2x + 2y + 3z — 6 = 0. A The equation of a plane, in its gen
eral form, is
ax + by + cz + d = 0 . (1 )
Substituting, in turn, the coordinates of the points Mx, M 2, M 2 into
equation (1 ), we obtain a system of equations
f a — 6 + 2 c = — d,
< 3 6 = — d,
v 2 a + 6 = — d,
solving which, we find a = —d/3, b = —d/3, c = —d/2. For these
values of the coefficients a, b and c equation (1 ) assumes the form
239
-~d (2x - f 2y + 3z — 6 ) = 0. Cancelling by (—d) (d =£ 0), we get the
required equation. 29. x + z — 4 = 0. ▲ Suppose n = (a; b; c) is a
vector normal to the plane a passing through the point A (4; 0; 0).
Since the plane a is parallel to the y-axis, the vector n is perpendicular
to any vector, which is parallel to the y-axis, say, to the vector j =
= (0; 1; 0). Hence it follows that nj = b = 0, i.e. the equation of the
plane a has the form a (x — 4) + cz = 0 or a1 (x — 4) + z = 0, where
ax = ale. Substituting the coordinates of the point B into the last
equation, we get al (0 — 4) + 4 = 0, ax = 1 , whence it follows that
x + z — 4 = 0. 30. —1.▲ If D 6 (ABC), then the vectors AB, AC,
AD are coplanar and, therefore, AD = kAB + pAC, where at least
one of the coefficients (k, p) is nonzero. In the coordinate form, this
equation can be written as (k — 1; 2; 2) = X (—2; 3; 1) + p (0; 2; —2).
From this we get a system of equations
/ —2k = k —i ,
^ 3 k + 2p = 2,
1 X—2 p = 2 ,
from which we find that k = 1 and k = —-2k + 1 — — 2 + 1 = —1 .
Remark. We can also solve the problem by first writing the equation
of the plane (ABC) (see the solution of problem 28) and then substi
tuting into that equation the coordinates of the point D. 31. # (a) See
the solution of problem 30; (b) ji/2; (c) 21 }/l0 /2 . %SABCD = (1/2)
| AC | | BD |. 32. n/3. # To find the angle between the planes (ABC)
and (ABD), determine the angle between the vectors nx and n2, which
are normal to the planes (ABC) and (ABD). 33. (a) A (1; 2; 0);
B (0; 0; 2). A Setting z = 0 in the system of equations
( 2 * + 3 y + 4 z —8 = 0 ,
\ 4 x + y + 3 z — 6 = 0,
we find the abscissa and the ordinate of the point A of intersection of
the straight line p and the plane xOy, i.e. we find that x = 1 and y = 2.
Similarly we find the coordinates of the point B (we must put x = 0
in system (1)); (b) arcsin (2/3). • We can calculate the required angle
BA n
from the equality cos <p = , where BA = (1; 2 ; —2 ) and
\BA\ |n |
n = (0; 1; 0) is a vector normal to the plane xOz (qp) is the angle between
the vectors BA and n). 34. (a) E (12; 0; 3); Fx (0; 6 ; 12); G (6 ; 12; 0);
(b) lx + by + 6 z — 102 = 0; (c) 3 ]/lO /U . • The equation of the
straight line passing through the point Bx at right angles to the plane
(EFXG) has the form (the vector (x; y; z — 12)
7 o b
being collinear with the vector (7; 5; 6 )). Determine the coordinates
of the point M of intersection of that line and the plane (EFXG) and
find the distance | BXM | by the formula | BXM | = Y (arBl — xM)a +
+ (yBt — Vm )2, + CzBt — ZM)a •
240
Chapter 7
PLANE GEOMETRY
6 . A Let us draw the midline [MN] of the trapezoid ABCD (see the
figure). It cuts the diagonals AC and BD of the trapezoid at points E
and F, which are the midpoints of the respective diagonals (which
follows from the Thales theorem for the angles BAC and BDC). Con
sequently, [EF] || [AD]. Next we find the length of the segment [EF];
[MF] is the median of the triangle ABD, [ME] is the median of the
1 6 -0 1 5 2 1 241
triangle ABC and, therefore, it follows from the equation | MF | =
= | ME | + | EF |, or a!2 = | EF | + bl2, that | EF | = (a — b)l2.
7. A Suppose [CF) is the bisector of
B the angle BCD, [DP) is the bisector
of the angle ADC (see the figure).
Since BCD + ADC = jt, we have
XV XV
FCD + MDC = ji/2, and hence it
follows that CMD = jt/2 and, there-
/ \
fore, LMN = Jt/2. (The angle CMD
and LMN are vertical). We can prove by analogy that L L K N is
a right angle, and since (AF!) || (CF), we infer that K LMN is a
rectangle.
Let us now find tl*e length of the diagonal [KM], The triangles
ABB and CDF are congruent (| AB | = | CD |, L.B = l_D, | BE | =
= | DF |; the last equality follows from the fact that the bisectors
BK and DM of the triangles in question are the altitudes of thosfe
triangles, and this means that | AB | = | BE \ = | CD | = | DF |).
It follows from the congruence of those
triangles that | KE \ = [ MC | and so
KECM is a parallelogram. Consequently,
| K M | = | EC | = | BC | — \ BE \ =
= I BC | — | AB |.
8 . ▲Suppose E and F are the points of
intersection of the straight lines (AM) and
(AN) with the diagonal BD (see the fig
ure). It follows from the similarity of the
triangles AFB and DFN (the angles AFB
, XV XV
and DFN being vertical, FND=* BAF),
+ - | OBl \ b + - | 0 0 ! | c; and
since | 0C\ | = | 0 A X | = | 0 BX | = r ,
it follows that £ = r =
= rp, whence we find that r —S/p.
13. ▲ The area S of the triangle ABC can be found by the for
mula £ = (1/2) ab sin C, where C is the magnitude of the angle
opposite to the side AB. We draw the diameter ACX of the circle
16* 243
circumscribed about the triangle ABC. The angles BCXA and ACB,
inscribed into that circle, are such that sin C = sin Cx and, therefore,
A a c . _ 1 _ C
| AB | = c = 2R sin C. Consequently, sin C an^ S = - ^ a b ,
244
Prove that MPN = MFH, PNQ = PMQ. 18. A Rotation of the
triangle DBF about the point B through the angle of 90° (see the
A P C '
figure) carries the point D into the point Dx and the point F into the
point Fx coinciding with the point C. At the same time, | DXC | =
= I DF I, and D1 £ (AB). Since | AB | = | BD | = | BDX | (as the
lengths of the sides of a square) and | AP | = | PC | (by the hypothe
sis), it follows that [BPJ is the median
of the triangle ADXC, and this means
that | BP | = — | D^C | = 1 1 DF | or
I DF | = 2 | BP |. 19. • Prove that
under the homo the tic transformation
with centre 0 = [AC] f) [BD] with the
ratio of similitude k = — | CD |/| AB |,
the square constructed on [AB] will go
into a square constructed on [CD], 20. A
Since dx == a + band d« = a — b (see the figure), we can square
these equalities and add them together to obtain
I dx | 2 = | a | 2 + | b | 2 + 2 a«b,
I d 2 | 2 = | a | 2 + I b | 2 — 2 a-b,
d\ + d% = 2 (a2 + 6 2).
240
AK] is a segment of the tangent drawn from the point A to the given
circle (K being the point of tangency) (see problem 15 in 7 . 1 ). 1 1 .
• Find the radii i?1? R 2, Rs of the circles from the system of equations
7 7?i + /?2 = a»
\ *2 + *3 = &,
where a, 6 , c are the lengths of the sftles of the given triangle. 1 2 . (a)
A We draw a straight line (AB) (see the figure); K => (AB) f| p. Using
347
/505
= 2 cos2 —o— cm. k We introduce a rectangular sys
tem of coordinates such that the origin coincides with the vertex A
(see the figure), and the abscissa axis is chosen so that the side AC
should belong to that axis. In that system of coordinates the vertices
A and C have the coordinates A (0, 0), C (15, 0). Let us find the coor
dinates of the point B . Its ordinate y B is numerically equal to the alti
tude hh = 1 1 . 2 cm, and the abscissa can be found from the relation
hi + | AD | 2 = c2, | AD | = x B = 6 . 6 , F (7.5; 0). Now we have
I BF | = m b = Y ( x F - x BY + (yF - y B)*= /5 0 5 /2 ;
(h) Y 65/8 cm. ▲The required distance d can be found from the formu-
la d = y ~ (x 0 l— x0 2 ) 2 + (y0 l — yo2)2. where x0l and y0 , are the
coordinates of the centre of the circumscribed circle and x02 and y0z
are the coordinates of the centre of the inscribed circle. Let us deter
mine the coordinates) x0{ = bl2 = 7 . 5 , y0<L = r = 4 ; y0i =
= Y R 2 ~ (6/2) 2 = 25/8, x0z ---- r cot (A/2) = 7 (cos A = 33/65). It is
now easy to find d. (i) Y 265/24. ▲Since the coordinates of the centre
of the circumscribed circle are known: Ot (7.5; 25/8), it follows that
in order to find | GOi | it is necessary to determine the coordinates of
the point G. Let us find them. The vectors BF and BG are collinear,
i.e. BG = XBF, with X = 2/3. We have: BF = (0.9; —11.2) and
BG = (0.6; —22.4/3). Suppose xG and yG are the abscissa and the
ordinate of the point G respectively. Then xG — xB = xG — 6 . 6 =
= 0.6 and yG — y B =J yG — 11.2 = —22.4/3, whence it follows
that xG = 7.2 and yG = 11.2/3 = 56/15. From the formula
Y ( xg xOi)2 — (yG yo{)2 we distance | GOi | . 2. a2 X
X ( / 3 “- l)/4. 3. 4 cm. 4. 5.2 m. 5. jr/4 or 3jt/4. 6 . a Y S ( 2 — /3 )7 5 l
7. 10 cm, 10 cm, 12 cm. 8 . 1. 9. 1 dm. 10. arccos (2/3), arccos (2/3),
n — 2 arccos (2/3). 11. 13 cm, 15 cm. 12. 3; 4; 5. 13. 6 . 14. Rr. k Sup
pose a, b are the lengths of the legs, c is the length of the hypotenuse.
Then p = (a + b + c)/2 and it is easy to notice that a + b + c = 2R.
Consequently,) p = R, and since S = pr, it follows that S \ = Rr.
15. 27 dm, 64 dm. 16. j / T 17. 10 cm, 10 cm, 1 cm. 18. ( / 3 + / l 5 ) / 4
248
sq cm. 19. 35/4. A Suppose 0 is the intersection point of the medians
[AN], [BF], [CM] of the triangle ABC. On the ray [BF) beyond the
point F, we lay off a point P so
that | PF | = | OF |, and connect
the points A and P by a line seg
ment. The lengths of the sides of
the triangle A OP are respectively
equal to 2 \ A N |/3, 2 | CM |/3,
2 | BF |/3. Therefore, the required
area is given by the relation
5/3: (2/3^2. 20. 6 c /2 /( 6 + c).
21. 3 7/2 cm, 1.5 cm, 3.5 cm.
22. jt/6 , n/3, n/2. 23. Y b (b + c).
24. a2b2l (2a2 — b2). 25. n/2 +
arccos 5/8. 26. 7 cm, 15 cm.
27. 6 cm, 9 cm, 3 1/34/2 cm.
28. (1 / 2 ) (a — b)2 sin a.
29. V 2 + V I . 30. 216 sq cm.
31. 2 cm. 32. 15 cm. • Draw (CE)\\
|| (AB) in the trapezoid A BCD (see
the figure) and find the length of the
altitude CF of the triangle ECD.
33 . * (a* - _ 6 * ) e ^ £ .
2 7 s in (a + p)
• Extend the nonparallel sides of
the trapezoid ABCD till they inter
sect at the point E (see the figure)
and find the area of the trapezoid as
the difference between the areas
of the triangles A ED and BEC.
34. 2 cm, 5 cm, 5 cm, 8 cm.
35. (91^3/4) r2. $ Prove that the
quadrangle A B E K is a trapezoid.
36,
is yii cm. 37. 85/8 cm. A'From
5
the vertex B we draw a perpen
dicular to the base AD till it meets
the circle at the point F (see the
figure). The segment fCF] is a
diameter of the circle circum
scribed about the trapezoid ABCD
BE AE I ED
or | EF | = \A E |
ED I EF | I BE I
21 — 9 2 1 -9 \ _ 45
4 (21- l~ 4
249
Then, from the right triangle FBC we find| FC j and R:
\ FC\ = Y \ B F \ * + \ B C \ * = \ / r (8 + — - ) 2+ 9 2
85 ,, R = I CF | 85
cm.
= x and 2 8
38. 5ji/12, 7ji/12. • Prove that the trapezoid A BCD is isosceles and
that the length of its midline is \ AD | / 3 / 2 . 3 9 . V i a 2 + 6 2)/ 2 . A Sup
pose | Z?C I b, I AD I = fl, I ^ I = x, and the altitudes of the
trapezoids EBCF and AEFD are hx and h2 respectively (see the figure).
By the hypothesis, SEBCF = SA B C D / 2 and SAEFD = SABCj 2 or
(* + 6 ) / 2 = (a + 6 ) (fcj + 6 2) / 4
and 6 2 (x + o)/2 = (a + 6 ) X
X (hx + 6 2)/4. Let us transform
these equations:
2ft, a+ 6
^1 + 62 x+ 6 ’ (i)
26a o+ 6
( 2)
6 1 + 6 2 x+o
Adding together equations ( 1 ) and (2 ) we get 2 = (o + 6 ) ( — ------ f-
^ \x + o 1
H— 9 solving which we get the answer. 40. ((o + 6 )/o)2.
A We draw [CE] || [BD] (see the figure). The areas of the triangles
ABC and CDE are equal since | BC | = | DE | = 6 , and their alti
41. 3r. 42. R2 arcsin ------ . • Find the angle of the sector a and then
*5
ft — r
calculate the area S of the sector by the formula S = R 2al2. 43.
5R2 (2 / 3 + 5ji)/6. 44. 1/3. 45. (Rr/(R + 2r)2) [37? — 2r ±
± Y 8 (7? 2 — 27?r)]. 46. 1/^2 — j/lf/ 3. A Since BD is the bisector
of the angle ABC, it follows that [P(7] is the diameter of the inscribed
250
circle and the triangles PQM and PQN B
are right triangles \see the figure)
(PNQ = PMQ = ji/2). Suppose the arc
PN is of x rad, NMQ is of y rad. Then
DBC = (y — x)l2 = jt/6 , and y + x = ji;
hence we find that x = ji/3, y — 2jt/3
and PQN — J t / 6 and QPN = ji/3. Let
us find the angles MQP and MPQ,
ACB = n — (jc/3 + j i / 4 ) = 5jc/12, and
suppose the arc MN is of z rad and the arc MQPN is of t rad.
Then (t — z)l2 = 5jc/ 12, t + z = 2jx. From these equations we
2n 7 jt
find 2 = 7ji/12 and then the difference y — z
T ~ i 2 n ~ 12 ■
Thus, Q P M — Setting | PQ | = 1, we find Spqm and SpQN:
a 1 A . n ji 1 . Jt
SpQM = sm 24"cos "24 ^ 4"Sin 1Y ’
0 1 . it jc 1 Jt
-SpqJV = T sin — cos -g - = T sin -g -
and obtain the required relation:
sin - - -
(k . „
\ here sin 12 ~ ^ 2 ~ 2 /
47. ] / 7/2. AWe introduce the rectangular system of coordinates Oxy
so that the origin coincides with the centre of the larger circle and
the abscissa axis contains the line segment connecting the centres of
the circles [OOx] (see the figure).
To find | AC |, we determine the
coordinates of the points A and C.
The equations of the circles with
centres at the points 0 and 0 Y
have the forms
*2 + J/2 = ( / 2 j * (1)
and
(* - 2)2 + i/2 = 1. (2)
The system of equations (1) and
(2 ) has two solutions, one of which
251
(x = 5/4, y — j/T/4) defines the coordinates of the point A . Suppose
xc and yc are the coordinates of the point C. Then xB = (xA + xc)l2,
i/B = (i/A + yc)/2- We ^ave a system of equations
*3 + ^ = 2, ( J g W _ 2|2 + ^ C+ V T /4 j a = lt
9
48. y sq cm. A Suppose x is the length of one of the diagonals; then
the length of the other is 6 — x. The area of the convex quadrangle,
whose diagonals are mutually perpendicular, is half the product of
the lengths of these diagonals: S (x) = x ( 6 — x)/2, x £ fO, 6 ]. Thus,
the largest possible value of the area of the quadrangle coincides with
the greatest value of the function S Or) on the interval [0 ; 6 J. Since
S' (x) = 0 for x = 3 (a point of maximum) and S (0) = S (6 ) = 0,
the function S (x) attains its largest value at the point x = 3:
max S (x) = S (3) = 9/2 sq cm. 49. 2 (p^T — 1). • Half the sum
X 6 [0; 6]
of the lengths of the bases of the trapezoid is equal to (4 — (1 +
+ >^2) x)/2, where x is the length of the altitude. 50. (a sin a)/3. 51.
The area of the parallelogram is the largest if one of its sides coincides
with the midline of the triangle.
Chapter 8
SOLID GEOMETRY
8.1. A Straight Line, a Plane, Polyhedra, Solids of Revolution
1. 1 2 |/2 /5 o r t/337/5 cm. 2. arcsin (sin q> sin\| 3). A Let us denote the
planes of the faces of the dihedral angle at the edge (NM) by a and P
(see the figure). We have: A 6 (NM),
252
/ Jl \
sin (e, p) = sin ^ (e,j)J
X"X
= cos(e, j) = e-j = sin<p sin ^ .
3. arccos (cot <p cot ty). The prob
lem is solvable if cot q> cot ^ ^ 1 .
4. 21 (3 + tan2 cp), 0. # Consider
two cases: (1) the points A and B
lie on the same side of the plane y;
(2 ) the points lie on different sides
of the plane y . 5. (m - f 2h)/S;
(2h — m)l3; ml3. 6 . 21 sin a X
X / 2 5 + I2 cos 2 a. 7.y^2Ftan 2 p/s a. 8 . b3/ Y 2. 9. arccos (5/3 Y 6 ).
▲Suppose | A A X | = 2, then from the right triangles NPC and MPD
(see the figure) we find that | NC | = / 6 and | MD | = 3. Let us con
sider the vector equality NC = N M + MD + DC or NC — MD =
= N M + DC. Squaring this equality, we get
| NC | 2 + | MD | 2 - 2 N C M D = | NM | 2 -f-| DC \* + 2NMDC
= (NC, MD). Solving the equation cos q> we get the answer.
3 /6
10. arccos (1/3). ▲ We introduce
a rectangular basis i, j, k with
the origin at (the vertex B of the
cube (see the figure). The required
angle between the planes (BCBJ
and (BCXM) is equal to the angle
between the straight lines perpen
dicular to those planes. Let us find
the vectors normal to these planes.
It is evident that the vector
niJL (BCBx) has the coordinates
(1; 0; 0). Assume that n2 =(a; b; c)
is a vector normal to the plane
(BCXM). Then n2-BCx = 0 and
n2-B~M = 0. The vectors BCX and
BM have the coordinates (0; 1; 1) and (1 ; / ; 0 ) respectively.
1 2
We have equations
6 + c = 0,
«+}=<>.
253
Setting c = 2, we get b = —2 and a = 1 ; thus, n 2 — (1 ; —2 ; 2 ).
Next we determine the angle between the vectors nx and n2:
Since 1/3 > 0, the angle between the vectors is equal to the angle
between the straight lines parallel to these vectors and, consequently,
to the required angle between the planes (BCBx) and (BCt M). Remark.
We can take the vector (c/2; —c; c), (c ^ 0), as n2. 11. a j/29/3.
12. Z3 sin 2 p Y 3 cos 2 p — sin 2 p/3.
Y s in -
--ft • sin
•_ a + ft
p3 sin a
13.
16(1 + sin (a / 2 )f sin(P/2)
I JT
y cos " 0 " - - cos2 a + sin2 a cos ty,
1 3 -
from w h ich i t follow s th a t cos 'vl?= '2 '— 2 " C0s2(P* 30. ( j/3 / 4 ) /* 3 X
X (3 tan2 9 — 1), 9 €( n/ 6 ; n/2). 31. 25/2. A Suppose (AO) _L (BSC),
256
47. A A 48.
2ji—3 Y 3
27 “' 10n+3 / 3 *
not2 tan — (1 + sin — j
49. • 50.
COS y cos2 P
X I ,/ l± + sa 7 . sin
- 4
Jtr2 jta3
* 3 * si (ct/2) • 8> "24 sin 3 a tan (p. 9. 2 arc sin (tan a),
«6 (O + J t).
A Since the pyramid SABC (see the figure) is regular, the centre ooff
the sphere circumscribed about it is on the straight line (SO) (| SO | =
= h), lying in the plane (ASSJ,
where ^ is the point of inter- c
section of the line (SO) and the
sphere. Connecting the point A
with Si by a line segment, we
get a right triangle [SASt
(A = ^ as an inscribed angle
resting on the diameter SSt)t
Suppose | SSi | = 2 i?, \ B C \ = x \
then | AO | = x l Y 3 , and from
the proportion ! ^ i -
we have x2/3 = h (2 R — h)-
Since the triangle AOS is right"
1/2 17-01521 257
angled, we have | AS |2 = x2/3 + ft2. We can now find | 4 5 |
M S |* + | SC |2 — 2 | A S | | SC | cos a = x2 (| A S | = | SC |),
x2 2 h2 ( 1 — cos a)
whence we have Solving now the equation
3 ~~ 1 + 2 cos a
2 ft* ( 1 — cos a) Y h 2 cos2 a + a 2
l + 2 cosa = " h(2R
v““ — ,v,%
h), we get the answer. 12.
ViiV/ «««**«*• *— 2 cosa
258
If the centre 0 of the circumscribed sphere belongs to the pyramid
SAB C D , the radical must be preceded by the plus sign. The length of
the lateral edge can be found from the right triangle ASO^i I AS | =
= Y I I O C x | 2 = p^l62.5. By the cosine law we find, from
the triangle B S C , that
/\ | B S | 2+ | C S |2— | B C | 2 _309 309
C O S (B SC ) = B S C = arccos
2 |BS | |CS | 325 ’ 325*
If the centre 0 of the sphere does not belong to the pyramid
S A B C D , the radical must he preceded by the minus sign, and then
/ 3 \ 3 b sin a
B S C = j i - arccos f — j = arccos - 18.
13
2 ( 1+ cobt )
ASuppose the point 0 is the centre of a ball inscribed into the pyramid
S A B C (see the figure), in which | A C | = | A B | = b , ( S A ) ± ( A B C ) ,
( A L S ) is the bisector plane of the dihedral angle formed by the non
parallel faces A S C and A S B . B y
the hypothesis, B A C = A L S — a.
The point 0 6 ( A L S ) and ( O L ) is
the bisector of the angle A L S . The
projection of the point 0 onto the
plane of the base, which will be de
signated as O x , belongs to the
bisector ( A L ) of the angle C A B ,
and the projection of the inscribed
ball onto the plane of the base
is the large circle of the ball with
centre at Ox, touching the sides A B
and A C of the triangle A B C . Let
us denote the point of tangency of that circle and the Side A C by K ,
and then | O x K | = | O O x | = r, where r is the radius of the in
scribed ball.
From the right triangle O O t L we find | OxL | = r cot(a/2).Further
more, we have | A O i | = | A L | — | 0 \ L | = b cos (a/2) —
— r cot (a/2). From the right triangle A O ^ K we get a relation
| o xK | = r= | AOx ) sin (a/2 )
= (6 cos (a/ 2 ) — r cot (a/ 2 )) sin (ct/2 ),
solving which forr we get the answer. 19, h r l ( Y r2 + 4h 2 ± r). # Con
sider two cases of location of the centre of the sphere with respect to
the plane of the base of the pyramid. 20. {1/2 ylf; 1 / 1 ^ 6 } .# When sol
ving the problem, bear in mind that there are five spheres touching all
the planes of the faces of any triangular pyramid: the sphere inscribed
into the pyramid and four spheres each of which touches one of the
faces of the pyramid and the extensions of its three other faces. 2 1 .
5^-sin 3 a tan8 2 . 9 Find the volume V of the pyramid, the area S of
o ^
the full surface of the pyramid, and from the equation V = (1/3) rS
17* 259
Jlfl^COSCt
determine the radius r of the inscribed ball. 2 2 . ^ --.— , a £ (0 ; jt/2 ).
The conditions of the problem are also satisfied by the pyramid with
vertex at the point D x . In that case, the volume V 2 of the cone is equal
to 637 jti?3/12 000.
35. |j * f l * ( 4 - / 7 ) / 2 ; "** 36. 2 r * s in p .
260
d 2 sin if sin(y =b if)
39. for v€[<p; Jt/2]; a £ (0; 2ji/3),
4 Y 3 sin 2 y sin 2 (a/2)
a2 sin (p sin (y —if)
for y £ (if; <p), a £ (0; 2jt/3), 0 in the other
4 / 3 sin 2 y sin 2 (a/2)
, , / tan (a/ 2 ) \ . / 2 sin (a/ 2 ) v
cases; here (p== arccos ^ —- J , if = arccos ^ J ^
• When solving the problem, take into account that y £ (0; jt/2).
40. {(3 / 3 / 4 ) k2 cos2 y; ( / 3 / 4 ) Zc2 cos y» ( / 3 / 2 ) A*2 cos y / 1+3 cos2 7 }?
where cos y = l / / l + 4 tan 2 |5. # When solving the problem, bear
in mind that any triangular pyramid has 7 planes equidistant from
f Z2 cos2 P 3Z2 cos P \ /Q 2 /, +2 .,
its vertices. 41. { — ------— 7 7 t - ------Tor ^ • 42. a2 (l — cot2 a) X
I i + cos2 P 4 (1 + cos2 P)J 7
X sin a , a £ [ji/4; Jt/2). # Determine the lengths of the diagonals d{
S
and d2 of the section and calculate the area S of the section by the for
mula S — dtdJ2. 43... ^rL . 44. 3a2 / 2 / 5 . ALet us introduce a rectan-
sin2a
gular basis (i, j, k) at the point A as shown in the figure. Suppose
CXAC = a. We consider the unit vector n perpendicular to the plane
of the section ABxCxD^ By the hypothesis, (n, j) = 120°, and the
vector n can be represented in the basis (i, j, k) as follows:
n = — sin a cos 45° i — sin a cos 45° j + cos ak.
Furthermore, we have
/\ l
(nj) = cos (n, j) = |— £•= —sin a cos 45°=^> a = 45°.
sequently, for x = V~4F/ 1^3 the function S (x) has a minimum coin
ciding with its least value on the interval (0, 0 0 ) being considered.
47. • Find the largest value of the function V (x) =
O Z/
H x
___ \ 2
( — -g— 1 on the interval z£[0; H] (x being the length
of the altitude of the cylinder). 48. 2 Y 2 R i 3 \ AR/3. • Find the
nh2
values of h, h £ [0; 2R] for which the function V (fr) = -*■■-— (2R — h)
assumes the largest value on the indicated interval (r2 ==_h (2R — h)).
49. The cone with the radius of the base equal to R j/2 and the alti
tude equal to 4i?. A Suppose r, H, cp are the radius of the base of the
cone, the length of its altitude and the magnitude of the angle of
inclination of the generatrix to the plane of the base respectively. We
262
have:
V (c p )= -2 j-ta n (p c o t* -|-,
<P
(2) if y £ [jt/2; Jt), then cos cp < 0, and cp = ox/2 is a point of maximum
of the function \S (cp) and, therefore, Smax = 12I2 in this case.
Suppose p is the magnitude of the angle between the lateral edge
of the pyramid and the plane of 4the base, h is the length of its altitude.
We have: h cot p = 2h cot a or cot p = 2 cot a and h = k sin a.
263
Let us find now the length of the generatrix of the cone (of the lateral
edge of the pyramid): I = /&/sin |3. We can now find the expression
for the area of the section:
*SSec = 4" ( gipfr ) 2 sin (p= — *2 sin2 a (1 + 4 cot2 a) sin <p.
3X(z + l)3
—2)2d i= 1
o
I3—5ji. We
11
have used the
l , _ i |_ 2 = { " * “ 1’ 1)1
I a; —3, [1; oo);
(b) 32ji/3. A The volume V will be found with clue account of the
fact that
f 2, x£ (—oo; —1),
l * - l | - | * + 1 | = < - 2 * f * € [ - 1 ; 1),
I — 2, [1; o o ).
3 - 1 1 2
V = ji ^ ( \ x —1 1— I £ + 1 I )2 d x = :i ^ 4dx + Jt ^ Ax2 dx+ji j* 4dor;
264
(c) 18ji/5; (d) 2An; (e) 8j i . 7. The diagonal of a square is perpen
dicular to the axis of revolution. • Denoting the length of the side
of the square by a, and the magnitude of the angle formed by one
of the sides of the square and the axis of revolution, by a, show that
the volume of the resulting solid of revolution is equal to
na3 (sin a + cos a).
Chapter 9
MISCELLANEOUS PROBLEMS
= Q/i + X* + *3 + • • • + *h) — y i + *i +
^ — yi + x\ + Xk+i = (^ + 1) — 1 ~\r xi+
= fc + 1 + (*fe+i — 1) (1 — *i)-
266
And since xx > 1 and xk+1 < 1 , it follows that — 1) (1 — a^) >
> 0 and, therefore,
X1 + x2 + x3 + • • • +
^ (/c + 1 ) + (xf t + 1 — 1 ) ( 1 — xi) >. k + 1 «
This completes the proof of the assertion of the problem. 13. Suppose
Xl + X2+ X 3+ . . . + X n
■== a , y XiX2 X3 . . . xn = b.
From the last equality we have
X i_ X2 x3 xn = or L . 4x2
L xn = 1 .
v ~b b
1 4
b b
Since the product of n positive numbers is equal to unity, it follows
(see problem 1 2 ) that their sum is not smaller than n, i.e.
xn > n .
b 1 b ^ +
Multiplying both sides of the inequality by b and dividing by n, we
obtain
X\ + X2 + . . . + xn
a — ---------------------- — ^ 0,
n
and that is what we had to prove. Remark. The equality sign occurs
only in the case when
0 =0 ~~r~ = ■ • ■ = —0 = 1, i.e. when all the
numbers x i, i = 1, 2, 3, . . ., n are equal. 14. A Using the result
of the preceding problem, we have
y ^ = y r 2 ~ 3 ... n
1 + 2 + 3-f- . . . + a ( —
J—1) 72. n- f-1
n ~~ 2 2n ~
Raising both parts of the last inequality to the rath degree, we get the
original inequality. 15. A We prove the inequality using mathematical
induction. For n = 1 we have 1 + > 1 + a*. We have one of the
relations, “> ” or consequently, the assertion is true. Suppose the
inequality holds for n = fc, k £ [+ Let us prove that it also holds for
n = k + 1, i.e.
((1 + xx) ( l + ^ 2) . . . (1 + xh)) (1 + xh+1)
^ (1 + xx + x2 + . . . + Xh) + xh+1.
Replacing the sum 1 + xx + x2 + • . • + x^ on the right-hand
side of the inequality by the product (1 + xx) (1 + x2) . . . (1 + xk)
(the inequality becomes stronger) and transferring all the terms of the
inequality into the left-hand side, we obtain an obvious inequality
[(1 + #i) (1 + # 2) . . . (1 + x^ — 1] ^ 0. Remark. For xx =
= x2 = . . . = xn — x, the original inequality assumes the form
(1 + x)n ^ 1 -f- nx, x. > —1
18 * 267
. 1 3 5 99
(Bernoully’s inequality). 16. (a)
ASSUraeI ' T ‘ 6 - " - l 0 0 = n i ’
2 4 6 100 1 99 .100
and — 101= n , S i n c e ^ < | - , | < l
■’ Ioo< IoI
1 1 1
we have IT? < 11x112 = 7 7 -7 5 consequently, H < — = - < 7 7 -. We
101 y 101 10
have proved the assertion, (b) • Carry out the proof by induction,
(c) # Set n = 50 in the inequality in (b) and use the inequality
1 11 1
■—• < - = — . 17. # Carry out the proof by induction. 18. A
/1 5 1 Y 144 12
We carry out the proof by induction. For n = 1 the assertion is true:
| sin a | ^ | sin a | . Assume that the inequality | sin ka | ^ k | sin a |
is satisfied for n = k. Let us prove that | sin (k + 1) a | < (k + 1) | X
X sin a | for n = k + 1. Using the formula for the sine of the sum
of two angles and the inequalities | a + 6 | ^ | a | + | & |,
t cos a | ^ 1, | cos ka | ^ 1, we obtain
| sin (k + 1) a | = | sin ka cos a + cos ka sin a |
| sin ka cos a | + | cos ka sin a | < | sin ka | + | sin a | .
1 1
1+ tanTSo 180 180 61
jt > >
1 n 1 3 59 *
1 —tan
180 780 180
268
i 1 ii
< - j r - + - g - = - ^ . 20. (a) D = DX [\ D2\ (b) it' Dx and b 2 coincide.
21. —7/4. # Substitute x = 2 and x = 1/2 in the given equality and
exclude / (1/2) from the numerical equalities. 22. The straight line
y = x with the points O (0; 0) and A (1; 1) excluded.
23.
C
CM
O
•
23. (b)
y
i
---- r
i
\
-2 0 -----1 2x -2 0 1 2 x
2 3 . (e)
CM
CO
5
i y, t
l \ "A "1......' 0 j2 ^
-2
1 \ A
A \ ^
2 x
i
-i
1
3x 2x2+ i ■+ 1
lim ( 5x — 1 x2-\-2x = I S 1 2
x-*oo '
» - ° \ —-1 -V + —
x y y2 y
3 2+ ya
v- o ' 0 y 1 + 2y-
by setting x — 1ly. 6. 2/9. o Add the fractions together and set x =
= ily. 7. —3. # Factor the numerator and the denominator of the
fraction. 8. 3/4. 9. 3.
x2— 1f~x
▲ l i m — — — ■-lim
/s (Vx*—1) = lim Yx(x-\ - Y s + l ) = 3»
x -1 V x-i X -*■ 1 / i —1 X->1
. x — y 3x—2 x2- ( 3 z - 2 )
10. 16 * l.m ------ 2— 7------------ ==lim
x->2 x 4 x - » 2 ( 2 — 4 ) (
x x + — 2)
(a; — 21 (x — 1)
= lim lim
*1.2 ( * - 2 ) ( * + 2 ) ( * + V 3 * - 2 ) *-.2 ( x + 2 ) { x + V 3 x - 2 )
1 Y 5—x —2
(2 + 2 ) (2 + 2 ) 16 • "• + ▲ lim --- 7=-:-- -------
y 2 —ar—1
(5 -s -4 )(/2 ^ + l) /2 ^ J + 1 1
= lim — lim
l (2 —x — 1) ( V b -—x-\-2) 1^5—x-f-2 ^
270
12. —---- y - • • Multiply the numerator and the denominator
4a Y a —b
.— ,— 3 y x —i
of the fraction by Y x — & + y a — b. 13. -s- . A lim —3 7 = — 7
^ x-+i y x — 1
(» -i)(^ + r» + i) y x*-\~y x~ y\._
= lim ■ 14. 1.2.
SC™ (* — l) ( V r* + 1) X->1 /z + l 2
• Multiply the numerator and the denominator of the fraction
by ( / l + *) + / ( I - * ) 2)-
15. a2. A Let us simplify the expression in brackets. Setting^/a = &,
Y x = y (to make the transformations more convenient) we obtain
/ b2+ y 2 v - i ________ 2 by
\ b —y ) y3— by2+ b2y —bs
b —y__________ 2 by______ 1
( COS • COS X
)
a; ji \ /a; Ji \ j x n \
= lim
(
~2
~ T 2>H f H r ) sin( f + T )
6~/ cos ( T ~ T j
cos 0
= lim
COS
*- t 2si n( T + f )
1 1
u " i )
V~3 /3 '
2 s in ( i + i ) 2
271
tan x ^ tan2 x — tan 2 — j
. , tan® a: — 3 tan a:
18. - 2 4 . A lim ------- ;------ ;— = lim
x-*—
-y cos
cos (x+ 6 )/ x - *~~ cos (X + 6 )
tan x sin | ^ | sin ^ |
= lim
x -— COS ( * + 6 ) COS2 X COS2 -g*
24.
3
2 1 —4 sin 2 a: 4 (0.25- s i n 2 x)
19. ▲ lim = lim
/3 ’ x-»ji/6 cos 3a: x-+n/6 ^ cos * (cos2 x — 0.75)
_ llm ( _ ! _ ) = * - 20. ^ ^ , 4 _. s in 2 a: _. 2 sin 2 a:
0.4. A l i m — g— = iim-g- “ oT- •
*,n/6 V C°S * / /3 x-*0 X-*0 0 ^
„ , . . . sin 2 a: _. sin y . .. . .
Setting 2 x = y, we obtain lim — 9 ---- = l i m -= 1- Multiplying
x-+0 zx y-+0 y
the limits 2/5 and 1, we get the answer. 2 1 . 8 / 3 . Deduce the ex
pression sin 8 a: cot 3a: to the form — s*——---- — cos 3a:, calculate
r Q 8 a: sin 3a:
. ... _. sin 8 a: 3a:
the limits lim — q-----, lim . 0— lim cos 3a: and apply the
..- - 0. 8x x - * 0. S t n 3 x x-+ 0
theorem on the lim it of the product of a finite number of functions
2 1 . |
having a lim it at a given point. 22 . —1 /2 . # — 0 ,-A---- tana: =
x2+ 2x
y 2 -j-3a: — 1 sin a:
23. 5. # Set x — 1 = y and use the fact
(cos x) (a:+ 2 ) x
sin y
that lim = 1. 24. —1. 25. 25/6. 26. 0 for n = 1; 4.9 for n = 2 .
y-0 y
27. — sin a. • Transform the expression [sin (a4- 2a:) —sin (a-f- x)] —
— sin (a+a:) + sin a into a product. 28. 1/4.
A lim T^l + tanx — / l + s in x _ i jrn (1 + tang) —(l + sinx)
x-+0 x-0 a:3( | / l + tan a:+ j / l + s i n x)
tan a: ( 1 — cos2 x)
= lim ^ im ^ -X
x-*o ar* (1 -f- cos x) ( 1 -f- tan x -f- "\f1 -f-sin x) x-*o x3
X ___________________1 - 1________=
_
V \ + x* — 1
lim / 1 (z) = lim x-\-x2
0C-* 0 X-+ 0
y __________ l 4- X2 l_________
x ( * + 1) (>/ (1 + x2)2+ |/ 1 + X2+ 1)
*-o u + i x V a + ^ + ^ i + ^ + i )
i-V i-2 x
lim / 2 (a:) = lim x(l + i)
x-+0 oc-+0
_________________ l - ( l - 2 s ) ____________
*‘-To x ( l + * ) ( l + yAl - 2 x ) ( l + / l - 2 * )
_ _____________ 2_____________ 2 1
* “ (l + *)(l + ^ 1 ^ 2 i ) ( l + l / l ^ 2 i ) “ 1(1 + 1)(1 + 1) ~ 2 •
1 1
Next we find lim / (a:) = lim fi(x)+ lim / 2 (a;) = 0 + - « - = - « • .
x-> 0 x-> 0 x-> 0 z ^
30. (a){ —3; 3}; (b) {0}; (c){0}; (d) {0}; (e) { n / 2 + n n \ n ^ tl ); (i){n\n£'I}.
31. No, it is not. 32. 4.
/(*) f ( x ) - f i 0)
and lim ^ ^ = lim / ( *x)—
- / ( o) f ( 0 ).
X x —0 x-+0 0
/ ( * ) - / ( 0)
/(*) x —0
lim / v — 11 rii / \ /ftv t
x-+0 ^ (^) &(^) &(^)
x —0
?
^A±BiCi= ) t(l + c°s x) — (1 + cos ( i —a))] da;
o
and
it
^ 8 ^ = 1 [1—(1+ cos (*—«*))] d*.
Let Us find the limits of integration xx and x2' from the equation
1 + °0S x = 1 + cos (x — a) we find = a/2, and from the equa
tion 1 = 1 + cos (x — a) we find x2 = a + lt/2. Calculating now the
integrals, we find
■Sii.B.c, = 2 sin (a/2 ) — sin a and SAlB>Cl = 1 — sin a.
The figures A 1 B1 C1 and A 2B2C2 being equal, we have 2 sin (a/2) —
— sin a = 1 — sin a or sin (a/2) = 1/2. Solving the equation sin (a/2) =
1 / 2 and taking into account the restriction 0 < a < j i / 2 , we get the
answer. 6 . [log 2 3; oo). 7. (a) {e-1}. • /' (x) = 1 + In2 x + 2 \nx;
(b) { + , - + ± - |+ e + 8 . -2 X /3 + 3 /2 + 1 //2 .
▲ Differentiating F (,x), we obtain F' (x) = 3 sin x + 4 cos x.
F' (x) < 0 on the interval (5ji/4; 4jt/3) since sin x and cos a: assume
only negative values (x belongs to the third quarter) and, therefore,
F (x) assumes the least value at the point x = 4ji/3. Calculating the
4Jt/3
f y = 1 —3a:2,
I y = a: tan q>+ &.
b2
{ 2/r&= 2 cos a,
cos a + s in a > Q
Multiplying the first and the third equality term-by-term and squaring
the second equality, we get
, 9. n . cos a + sin a 9
k2b2 = sin a -------- ---------- , k2b2 = cos2 a.
278
straight line y = —2z/3. For any value of c, the line 2x + 3y — c
is parallel to the line 2x + 3y = 0 and, with an increase in c, it will be
displaced upwards. The greatest value of c, for which this line has
points in common with the domain of solutions of the given system,
is the value for which this line passes through the point A with the
coordinates x = 0, y = 2 (for c = 6). 27. —73/8. For x = —9/4,
y = 5/4.
A 2 x + x * + 2 x y + 3 y * - 3 y - b = (x* + 2 x ( y + i ) + ( y +i ) *)
—(a + M + S y * —3 j — 5 = ( x + y - f l)*-}-2 (//*—2
{ sin 2a < 0,
sin (a/2) > 0.
Solving the equation of the system for tan a, we get tan a = 3 and
tan a = —2. For tan a = 3 the inequality sin 2a < 0 is not satisfied.
Therefore, a = nk — arc tan 2. We seek the integral values of k
for which the inequality s i n - ^ > 0 is satisfied. We introduce the
designation arctan 2 = 20:
. ( o\ . nk Q nk . D
sin ( — 2 ------0 I = sm —2 ~ cos0 —cos - y - s m 0 > O .
Suppose k — 21, l$i%. Then cos nl sin 0 = (—l ) l+1 sin 0 > 0 if
I = 2n + 1, n 6 Z. If k = 21 + 1, I £ 7^ then sin ^ ) cos P =