
Math 319/320 Homework 1
... (iii) Some real numbers do not have a square root. (iv) If you are rich and famous, you are happy. Problem 2. Provide a counterexample for each of the following statements: (i) For every real number x, if x2 > 4, then x > 2. (ii) For every positive integer n, n2 + n + 41 is a prime number. (iii) No ...
... (iii) Some real numbers do not have a square root. (iv) If you are rich and famous, you are happy. Problem 2. Provide a counterexample for each of the following statements: (i) For every real number x, if x2 > 4, then x > 2. (ii) For every positive integer n, n2 + n + 41 is a prime number. (iii) No ...
Full text
... Note that (4) does not turn out as nicely as the corresponding result in [2] because we now have 1 - xk instead of (1 - x)k, which is the striking difference between (5) and (6). As a result, ...
... Note that (4) does not turn out as nicely as the corresponding result in [2] because we now have 1 - xk instead of (1 - x)k, which is the striking difference between (5) and (6). As a result, ...
B-1 Relations and Functions
... numbers. But, only real numbers that are greater than or equal to 1 are x-coordinates of points on the graph. Answer: The domain is The range is all real numbers. ...
... numbers. But, only real numbers that are greater than or equal to 1 are x-coordinates of points on the graph. Answer: The domain is The range is all real numbers. ...
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... • List some possible and meaningful x values, choosing easy ones such as 0, 1, 10 • Find the y values corresponding to each, and list them alongside • Find points where an axis is crossed (x = 0 or y = 0) • Look for maximum and minimum values at which the graph turns downward or upwards • If you are ...
... • List some possible and meaningful x values, choosing easy ones such as 0, 1, 10 • Find the y values corresponding to each, and list them alongside • Find points where an axis is crossed (x = 0 or y = 0) • Look for maximum and minimum values at which the graph turns downward or upwards • If you are ...