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An Explosion of Math!!!! By: Matt and Nick

An Explosion of Math!!!!

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An Explosion of Math!!!!. By: Matt and Nick. Quick 1 st Power Equation. Example: 4x=12 Answer: x=3. Special Cases of These Equations. A. x 3 -7x 2 =-6x -6x=-6x= (All real #’s) B. 5x/3 + 7/2 = 4 6*5x/3 + 6*7/2 = 6*4 10x+21 = 24 10x = 24-21 10x = 3 x = 3/10 C. 4/x=12 x=3. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An Explosion of Math!!!!

An Explosion of Math!!!!

By: Matt and Nick

Page 2: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quick 1st Power Equation

Example: 4x=12

Answer: x=3

Page 3: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Special Cases of These Equations

• A. x3-7x2=-6x

-6x=-6x= (All real #’s)• B. 5x/3 + 7/2 = 4

6*5x/3 + 6*7/2 = 6*410x+21 = 2410x = 24-2110x = 3x = 3/10

• C. 4/x=12 x=3

Page 4: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Addition Property (of Equality)

Multiplication Property (of Equality)

Example: If x = y, then x + z = y + z.

If a+2=7, then a+2+-2=7+-2

Example: If a = b, then a * c = b * c

Page 5: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Reflexive Property (of Equality)

Symmetric Property (of Equality)

Transitive Property (of Equality)

Example: 3m=3m

Example:If m=n, then n=m

Example: If m=n and n=p, then m=p

Page 6: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Associative Property of Addition

Associative Property of Multiplication

Example:(7+1/4)+3/4=7+(1/4+3/4)

Example: a(bc) = (ab)c

Page 7: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Commutative Property of Addition

Commutative Property of Multiplication

Example: 1/4+7+3/4=1/4+3/4+7 

Example: ab = ba

Page 8: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Distributive Property (of Multiplication over Addition)

Example:If -3(x-2)=1, then -3x+6=1 

Page 9: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Prop of Opposites or Inverse Property of Addition

Prop of Reciprocals or Inverse Prop. of Multiplication

Example: a+(-a)=0

Example:-3/x*-x/3=1

Page 10: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Identity Property of Addition

Identity Property of Multiplication

Example: 0 + a = a = a + 0

Example: 1 * a = a = a * 1

Page 11: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Multiplicative Property of Zero

Closure Property of Addition

Closure Property of Multiplication

Example: a × 0 = 0

Example: If x and y are real numbers, then x+y is a real

number.

Example: If x and y are real numbers, then x*y is a real

number.

Page 12: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Product of Powers Property

Power of a Product Property

Power of a Power Property

Example: ab × ac = a(b + c)

Example: (ab)m = am · bm

Example: (ab)c = abc

Page 13: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quotient of Powers Property

Power of a Quotient Property

Example:

Example:

Page 14: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Zero Power Property

Negative Power Property

Example: 170 = 1

Example: x-3=1/x3

Page 15: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Zero Product Property

Example: If ab = 0, then either a = 0 or b = 0 (or

both).

Page 16: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Product of Roots Property Example:

Quotient of Roots PropertyExample:

5 5 25

9 39

x x x

Page 17: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Root of a Power Property

Power of a Root Property

Example:

Example:

3 3x x

2

x x

Page 18: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quiz Time!!!

***You will see an example problem and you will click to see the answer! There are 10 Problems so it should

only take a few minutes to complete. Have Fun!

Page 19: An Explosion of Math!!!!

x9*x3=x12

Product of Powers Property

Page 20: An Explosion of Math!!!!

(xy)3= x3y3

Power of Product Property

Page 21: An Explosion of Math!!!!

x3=x3

Reflexive Property of Equality

Page 22: An Explosion of Math!!!!

x3*0=0

Multiplicative Property of Zero

Page 23: An Explosion of Math!!!!

If x-3=9, then x-3+3=9+3

Addition Property of Equality

Page 24: An Explosion of Math!!!!

If x and y are real numbers, then x+y is a real number.

Closure Property of Addition

Page 25: An Explosion of Math!!!!

x3*1=x3

Identity Property of Multiplication

Page 26: An Explosion of Math!!!!

(x9)3=x27

Power of a Power Property

Page 27: An Explosion of Math!!!!

9(x-y)=9x-9y

Distributive Property

Page 28: An Explosion of Math!!!!

y3x=xy3

Commutative Property of Multiplication

Page 29: An Explosion of Math!!!!

First Power Inequalities

***In the following slides you will see how to solve first power

inequalities.

Page 30: An Explosion of Math!!!!

One Inequality Sign

Page 31: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Answer: X<3

X+3<6

***To answer this, you would subtract 3 from both sides and end up isolating the variable on the left side and 3 on the other. The inequality sign would stay the same because you are not multiplying/dividing by a negative number.

Page 32: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Conjunction

Page 33: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Answer: -2<X<3

-2<x and x<3

***To solve a conjunction of two open sentences in a given variable, you find the values of the variable for which both sentences are true.

Page 34: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Disjunction

Page 35: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Answer: y<-3 or y>7

y-2<-5 or y-2>5

***To solve a disjunction of two open sentences, you find the values of the variable for which at least one of the sentences is true.

Page 36: An Explosion of Math!!!!

All Real #’s

Page 37: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Answer: {All real Numbers}

n+5 n+5

***As you can see, the inequalities cancel out to leave a technically true statement leaving the answer to be “All real numbers”

Page 38: An Explosion of Math!!!!

No Solution

Page 39: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Answer: No Solution

***Two inequalities have no solution when both of them must be true and they result in mutually exclusive conditions. Thus, there is no number that is both greater than 5 and less than 3, therefore there is no solution.

x + 5 > 10 and x -2 < 1

Page 40: An Explosion of Math!!!!

How To Do Linear Equations

• Slopes of All Lines:• Rising line-positive slope• Falling line-negative slope• Vertical line- undefined • Horizontal line- 0

• Equations of All Lines• Horizontal- y=c • Vertical- x=c • Diagonal- y=mx+b and Ax+By=C

Page 41: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Linear Equations Cont.

• Standard/general form: Ax+By=C

• Point-slope form: y-y1=m(x-x1)

• Slope intercept form: y=mx+b

• How to Graph: Video from Math TV

• Click here to Graph y=3x-1

Page 42: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Linear Equations Cont.

• How to Find Intercepts

1.Put the equation into Slope-Intercept form

2.Y=mx+b

3.The “b” in the equation is your Y-intercept

Page 43: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Linear Systems

Page 44: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Substitution Method

1. Solve the first equation for y

2. Substitute this expression for y in the other equation, and solve for x.

3. Substitute the value of x in the equation in Step 1, and solve for y.

***P.417 in your book has great examples!

Page 45: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Elimination Method

1. Add similar terms of the two equations

2. Solve the resulting equation

3. Substitute what you got for x and plug it into either of the equations and solve for y

***P.426 in your book has great examples!

Page 46: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Systems of Equations

• Independent- two distinct non-parallel lines that cross at exactly one point (solution is always some x,y-point)

• Dependant- two lines that intersect at every point (solution is the whole line)

• Inconsistent- shows two distinct lines that are parallel (never intersect), has no solution

• ***Graphs of these terms are on following slide!

Page 47: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Graphs from www.purplemath.com

Independent system:one solution and

one intersection point

Inconsistent system:no solution and

no intersection point

Dependent system:the solution is the

whole line

                                               

                                              

 

                                              

 

Page 48: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Factoring

• Grouping (2x2 and 3x1)- You use this when you have 4 or more terms

• GCF- You use this when you have any number of terms

• Difference of Squares- Use this with Binomials• Sum and Difference of Cubes- Use with

Binomials• PST- Trinomials• Reverse FOIL-Trinomials

Page 49: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Rational Expressions

*Factor first!

Answer

Factor and Cancel

*Common factor in both the numerator and the denominator and so we can cancel the x-4 from both

Page 50: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Rational ExpressionsAddition and Subtraction of Rational

Expressions

*Common denominator is: 6x5

*Multiply each term by an appropriate quantity to get this in the denominator and then do the addition and subtraction

Answer

Page 51: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Rational ExpressionsMultiplication of Rational

Expressions

Answer

*The first thing that we should always do in the multiplication is to factor everything in sight as much as possible

*Cancel as much as we can and then do the multiplication to get the answer

Page 52: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Rational ExpressionsDivision of rational expressions

Answer

*Divide first!

*Once we’ve done the division we have a multiplication problem and we factor as much as possible, cancel everything that can be canceled and finally do the multiplication.

Page 53: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quadratic Equations in one Variable

• Quadratic –second power

• Use the discriminant to predict how many x-intercepts each parabola will have.

Page 54: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Solve by FactoringSo the first thing to do is factor:

x2 + 5x + 6 = (x + 2)(x + 3)

Set this equal to zero:

(x + 2)(x + 3) = 0

Solve each factor:

x + 2 = 0  or  x + 3 = 0

x = –2  or  x = – 3

Answer: x2 + 5x + 6 = 0 is x = –3, –2

Page 55: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quadratic Equations in one Variable Cont.

Taking the square root of each side:

m2=49

m= √49

m= 7

Page 56: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Method of Completing the Square

For: x2+bx+?

1. Find half the coefficient of x: b/2

2. Square the result of step 1: (b/2)2

3. Add the result of step 2 to x2+bx: x2+bx+(b/2)2

4. You have completed the square: x2+bx+(b/2)2=(x+b/2)2

Page 57: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quadratic Equations in one Variable Cont.

Complete the square:

X2+14x=?

X2+14x+49= (x+7)2

(14/2)2=49

Page 58: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Quadratic Equations in one Variable Cont.

Quadratic Formula:

x=-b+√b2-4ac/2a

Page 59: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Line of Best Fit or Regression Line

• We use this to find an equation for a scatter plot.

• Your calculator will help you find the best fit line

• The calculator will find an exact regression line

Page 60: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Line of Best Fit or Regression Line Cont.

Write an equation of a line that has a slope of -4 and x-intercept of 3.

1. Substitute -4 for m in y=mx+b2. To find b, substitute 3 for x and 0 for y in y=-

4x+by=-4x+b0=-4(3)+b0=-12+b

12=bFinal answer: y=-4x+12

Page 61: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Functions

• A. f(x) means "y“ and not all functions are relations• B. A function can only use each x-value once

– Domain- set of all x-coordinates (independent)– Range- set of all y-coordinates (dependant)

• Find the range given f(x)=5x-3 and Domain={-2,0,7}.    f(-2)=5(-2)-3=-13    f(0)=5(0)-3=-3    f(7)=5(7)-3=32Range={-13,-3,32}

• C. We will show hot to do a Parabola on the next slide

Page 62: An Explosion of Math!!!!

How to Graph a Parabola

1. The easiest way to graph a parabola is to start by finding the x-coordinate of the vertex, or the turning point of the function. Given a parabola with a general equation of y=ax²+bx+c, the x-coordinate of the vertex can be found by using x=-b/2a, which is the equation of the axis of symmetry for the parabola. The axis of symmetry runs through the vertex, and therefore shares a common point.

2. Substitute the x value of the vertex back into the function to find the y value of the vertex.

3. After you've found your turning point, you can select two x-values to the right of the turning point and two values to the left of the turning point.

4. Plot all points

Page 63: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Simplifying Expressions with Exponents

1. x6 × x5 = (x6)(x5)              = (xxxxxx)(xxxxx)    (6 times, and then 5 times)             = xxxxxxxxxxx         (11 times)              = x11  

2. Simplify (–46x2y3z)0 This is simple enough: anything to the zero power is just 1.

(–46x2y3z) =1

3.

The "minus" on the 2 says to move the variable; the "minus" on the 6 says that the 6 is negative. Warning: These two "minus" signs mean entirely different things, and should not be confused. I have to move the variable; I should not move the 6.

*** The answer is -6x2

2

6

x

Page 64: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Simplifying Expressions with Radicals

1. Simplify

2. Simplify

3. Simplify

54

54 9 6 3 6

3 3203 3 3320 64 5 4 5

4 2a b4 2 2a b a b

Page 65: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Word Problems

1. Problem: The sum of twice a number plus 13 is 75. Find the number.

Hint: The word is means equals. The word and means plus. Therefore, you can rewrite the problem like the following:

The sum of twice a number and 13 equals 75.

Solution: 2N + 13 = 75

N=31

Page 66: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Word Problems Cont.

2. At the same moment, two trains leave Chicago and New York. They move towards each other with constant speeds. The train from Chicago is moving at speed of 40 miles per hour, and the train from New York is moving at speed of 60 miles per hour. The distance between Chicago and New York is 1000 miles. How long after their departure will they meet?

x/40 = (1000-x)/60, we can simplify it as x/40 + x/60 = 1000/60, or

x = 40 * 1000/(40 + 60) = 400

*The time that it takes the train from Chicago to travel 400 miles, is x divided by the speed of the Chicago train, which is t = x / 40 = 10.

***So, the answer is: 10 hours.

Page 67: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Word Problems Cont.

3. The total receipts for a hockey game are $1400 for 788 tickets sold. Adults paid $2.50 for admission and students paid $1.25. How many of each kind of tickets were sold?

• Alright, let's denote the quantity of ADULT tickets sold as x. Since the total number of tickets is The quantity of student tickets was 788, the number of student tickets is 788-x. What we need to do now is write the total $$ figure for the revenue. Since every adult ticket fetched 2.50, adults collectively have paid x*2.50. The students paid 1.25, and since we had 788-x of them, they paid the sum of (788-x)*1.25. So, we have total revenue = x*2.50 + (788-x)*1.25

• What we know is that the total revenue for the basketball game was 1400. This gives us the equation

• 1400 = x*2.50 + (788-x)*1.25

• Rewriting, we get

• x*(2.50-1.25) = 1400 - 788*1.25 or x*1.25 = 415 or x = 415/1.25 or x = 332

• That's the number of adult tickets. The number of student tickets is, therefore, 788-x, or 456. That's it!

***The answer is 332 adult tickets and 456 student tickets!

Page 68: An Explosion of Math!!!!

Word Problems Cont.

• Alright. So, we have 4(x-4) = 3x-4 or 4x - 4*4 = 3x-4 or, moving everything x-related to the left and numbers to the right, 4x - 3x = 4*4 - 4 x(4 - 3) = 4*4 - 4 or, dividing by 4 - 3: x = (4*4 - 4) / ( 4 - 3 ) or, calculating x, x = 12

***Bob's age is 12. His father is 36 years old.

Page 69: An Explosion of Math!!!!

The End!

Hope you enjoyed the show and have a great summer vacation!