Photo AI

After flying a short distance, an insect came to rest on a wall - NSC Mathematics - Question 11 - 2019 - Paper 1

Question icon

Question 11

After-flying-a-short-distance,-an-insect-came-to-rest-on-a-wall-NSC Mathematics-Question 11-2019-Paper 1.png

After flying a short distance, an insect came to rest on a wall. Thereafter the insect started crawling on the wall. The path that the insect crawled can be describe... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:After flying a short distance, an insect came to rest on a wall - NSC Mathematics - Question 11 - 2019 - Paper 1

Step 1

8.1 At what height above the floor did the insect start to crawl?

96%

114 rated

Answer

To find the height at which the insect started to crawl, we evaluate the function h(t)h(t) at t=0t = 0:

h(0)=(06)(2(0)2+3(0)6)=(6)(6)=36h(0) = (0 - 6)(-2(0)^2 + 3(0) - 6) = (-6)(-6) = 36

Thus, the insect started crawling at a height of 36 cm above the floor.

Step 2

8.2 How many times did the insect reach the floor?

99%

104 rated

Answer

To find when the insect reaches the floor, we set the height function equal to zero:

h(t)=0h(t) = 0

This leads to:

(t6)(2t2+3t6)=0(t - 6)(-2t^2 + 3t - 6) = 0

The solutions to this equation occur when:

  1. t6=0t=6t - 6 = 0 \Rightarrow t = 6 ( (time after 6 minutes) )
  2. For the quadratic 2t2+3t6=0-2t^2 + 3t - 6 = 0, we calculate the discriminant:

D=b24ac=324(2)(6)=948=39D = b^2 - 4ac = 3^2 - 4(-2)(-6) = 9 - 48 = -39

Since the discriminant is negative, this quadratic has no real roots. Hence, the insect reaches the floor 1 time (at t=6t = 6 minutes).

Step 3

8.3 Determine the maximum height that the insect reached above the floor.

96%

101 rated

Answer

To determine the maximum height, we first find the critical points by taking the derivative of h(t)h(t) and setting it equal to zero:

h(t)=2(t6)(2t3)h'(t) = -2(t - 6)(2t - 3)

Setting this equal to zero gives:

  1. t6=0t=6t - 6 = 0 \Rightarrow t = 6
  2. 2t3=0t=1.52t - 3 = 0 \Rightarrow t = 1.5\

Next, we evaluate h(1.5)h(1.5) and h(6)h(6) to find the maximum:

h(1.5)=(1.56)(2(1.5)2+3(1.5)6)h(1.5) = (1.5 - 6)(-2(1.5)^2 + 3(1.5) - 6) Calculating this, we find h(1.5)h(1.5) gives** (h(6)h(6) as done previously = 0).

Comparing these values finds that maximum height reached by the insect is at t=1.5t = 1.5, specifically at 18 cm.

Join the NSC students using SimpleStudy...

97% of Students

Report Improved Results

98% of Students

Recommend to friends

100,000+

Students Supported

1 Million+

Questions answered

;