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... Answer all the questions. Give non-exact numerical answers correct to 3 significant figures, or 1 decimal place in the case of angles in degrees, unless a different level of accuracy is specified in the question. At the end of the examination, fasten all your work securely together. The number of ma ...
... Answer all the questions. Give non-exact numerical answers correct to 3 significant figures, or 1 decimal place in the case of angles in degrees, unless a different level of accuracy is specified in the question. At the end of the examination, fasten all your work securely together. The number of ma ...
1 Cardinality and the Pigeonhole Principle
... for two sets to be the same size, or for one to be smaller than another, etc.. The word we use for the size of a set A is the cardinality of A, denoted |A| or #A (the second being used more for finite sets). Exactly what kind of thing a cardinality is in general is not clear (the collection of all p ...
... for two sets to be the same size, or for one to be smaller than another, etc.. The word we use for the size of a set A is the cardinality of A, denoted |A| or #A (the second being used more for finite sets). Exactly what kind of thing a cardinality is in general is not clear (the collection of all p ...
Targil 9 (following Alexey`s story, about catastrophes and linear
... see them in a certain cyclical order, at least if he doesn’t stand on a line connecting two sky-scrapers. There might be 8! different cyclic orders. (a) is it possible that each order will appear at some point? (b) for which minimal number of buildings, will it be possible to see the buildings in e ...
... see them in a certain cyclical order, at least if he doesn’t stand on a line connecting two sky-scrapers. There might be 8! different cyclic orders. (a) is it possible that each order will appear at some point? (b) for which minimal number of buildings, will it be possible to see the buildings in e ...
Mathematical Review
... This is an example of an Arithmetic Progression, where the difference between any two consecutive terms are equal (in this case 1). Using mathematical analysis we can compute the sum of the first ‘n’ terms in the sequence using the following formula; Sn = a1 + a2 + … + an = n(a1 + an)/2 This works a ...
... This is an example of an Arithmetic Progression, where the difference between any two consecutive terms are equal (in this case 1). Using mathematical analysis we can compute the sum of the first ‘n’ terms in the sequence using the following formula; Sn = a1 + a2 + … + an = n(a1 + an)/2 This works a ...