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Quantitative Competency Handbook Edition: 2000b James E. Mann, Jr. Wheaton College Perfect behavior may be as unattainable as perfect gear changing when we drive; but it is a necessary ideal prescribed for all men by the very nature of the human machine . . . It would be dangerous to think of oneself as a person of \high ideals" because one is trying to tell no lies at all [instead of a few lies]. In reality you might just as well expect to be congratulated whenever you do a sum, you try to get it quite right. To be sure, perfect arithmetic is an \ideal"; you will certainly make some mistakes in some calculations. But there is nothing very ne about trying to be quite accurate at each step in a sum. It would be idiotic not to try; for every mistake is going to cause you trouble later on. C. S. Lewis in Mere Christianity Contents 1 Statistics 2 2 Simple Algebra 6 3 Calculator usage 8 4 Areas and Volumes 9 5 Ratio and Proportion 13 6 Exponential Decay and Growth 14 7 Spreadsheets 16 8 Counting 17 9 Dimensions and Units 19 10 Review of Functions and Calculus Concepts 22 Sample Test Questions In the quantitative competency test, you will be asked questions from the following areas: statistics, including elementary data displays, simple algebra, calculator usage, areas and volumes, ratio and proportion, exponential growth and decay, counting, and elementary spreadsheet usage. In the sequel, you will nd a brief discussion of each of these areas. In addition, there will be references to readily available books where you can nd more information. 1 Statistics Numerical data is the subject of statistics. The idea is to take the data and wring from it answers to certain questions. The most basic analysis of data is its graphical display. There are three ways of plotting data which are commonly encountered: the frequency plot, the stem and leaf plot, and the box and whisker plot. We will give an example of each of these for the following data: 97.6 99.2 98.6 99.0 98.2 98.7 98.4 98.5 100.7 98.0 101.0 98.7 99.8 99.0 98.6 97.5 To get the proper visual eect for the frequency plot and the stem and leaf plot, we mark our number line o in coarse enough subdivisions so that the data will \pile up" near values which occur most often. You can see the eect in Fig.1. When making a frequency plot, you round the data to the nearest tic mark on your number line. In Fig. 1, we have chosen divisions of 0.5 and marked them on a horizontal number line. Then, we have represented each data value with a point which is rounded to the nearest tic. The eect which you see is a column of dots which pile the highest where the data value that occurs most frequently lies. 97 98 99 100 101 Figure 1: A frequency plot for the data above. The idea is to get the dots to pile high. Had we made ner subdivisions, each dot might have its own tic mark, and there would have been no piling. In the frequency plot, each value is represented, although they may be somewhat 3 rounded. You can glance at the plot and gather how many points are in the data set and what value or values occur most frequently. The stem and leaf plot is similar to the frequency plot in many ways. However, instead of making dots to represent each data point, we actually write the dierence between the data value and the stem. See Fig. 2. Above the stem 98.5, we see the value .2; from this we conclude that 98:5 + :2 = 98:7 appears in the data set. On a well made stem and leaf plot, the leaves should be arranged .1 .0 97 .4 .2 .0 .2 .2 .1 .1 .0 98 .2 .0 .0 .3 99 .2 100 .0 101 Figure 2: The Stem and Leaf Plot of the data above. Each data value is plotted by nding the value of the stem which is nearest and less than the data value and subtracting the stem value from the data value to form the leaf. in the order of increasing value as shown in Fig. 2. A nished plot is often made by rst putting the leaves with their stems and then arranging in proper order. With this kind of plot, all of the data is visible and the exact values can be recovered if necessary. Neither the frequency plot nor the stem and leaf plot is a data compression plot. This contrasts with the box and whisker plot which will be discussed next. Before making the box and whisker plot, we must describe the median of a set of data values. To nd the median, rst arrange the values in increasing order. We rearrange our data as shown: 97.5 98.4 98.7 99.2 97.6 98.5 98.7 99.8 98.0 98.6 99.0 100.7 98.2 98.6 99.0 101.0 Q1 M Q3 The median is the value in the middle of the data set. In the case being presented, there are an even number of data values. Therefore, there is no number which is the middle number. In such a case, we average the numbers on either side of the middle giving M = (98:6 + 98:7)=2 = 98:65. The rst quartile, Q1; is the median of the smallest half of the data set, and the third quartile, Q3; is the median of the largest half of the data set. The quartiles divide the data set into four parts. Exactly half of the data values lie between Q1 and Q3. If the set contains an odd number of values, the median is actually a member 4 of the set and no averaging is required, e.g. for the set 4, 7, 8, the value 7 is the median. In the case of an even number of values, the median value is not included in either the smaller or larger half of the set when determining the quartile values. The quartile values for the data are Q1 = (98:2+98:4)=2 = 98:3 and Q3 = (99:0 + 99:2)=2 = 99:1. The box and whisker plot displays only Q1; M; Q3 and the smallest and largest data value. The plot is made by taking the number line and making a short mark above the line at Q1; M; Q3. These values are connected to make the box. The whiskers extend from each end to the largest and smallest data values. See Fig. 3. 97 98 99 100 101 Figure 3: The Box and Whisker Plot, showing Q1; M; Q3, and the largest and smallest data values. The box and whisker plot is a data compression plot because you cannot tell how many values are used to make the plot and you cannot recover any of the original data by examining the plot. You can tell that 50% of the data lies between Q1 and Q3, the median , and the extreme values. Many times this is enough information from a data set. Suppose that you were given the box and whisker plot for all of your grades in some course. Do you think that such a plot would tell a better story of your performance than does the average grade? The box and whisker plot is particularly valuable for comparing two data sets. In addition to graphical representations of data, there are two calculated values used to characterize data. The rst is the mean or average, and the second is the standard deviation. The average is the sum of all of the data values divided by the number of values. The average for our set is 1581:5=16 = 98:84, where the numerator is the sum of the values. The average is an estimate of the middle of the data set (as is the median). For many data sets, the average and the median are quite close in value. When they dier by a large amount, you may be sure that the data has an unusual distribution. The standard deviation is a measure of how spread out the data is (in a sense, Q1 and Q3 measure the same thing). The formula is rather complicated, but by focusing on the deviation from the average, you will nd it is easy to remember. Let us give the formula in general terms rather than specic numbers. Suppose we have n data values called x1 ; x2 ; x3 ; ; xn . Then the average is given by x + x2 + + xn X = 1 : n 5 The standard deviation is then given by SD = X )2 + (x2 (x1 X )2 + + (xn n 1 1=2 X )2 : We will write out the example completely for the data set 2, 4, 6, 8. 2+4+6+8 X = = 5: 4 SD = = (2 p 5)2 + (4 5)2 + (6 3 5)2 + (8 5)2 1=2 20=3 If n is at all large, the standard deviation is an awkward calculation to make with a calculator. There are variations of the formula which are easier for a calculator, but readers are encouraged to learn to use the automatic feature of their own calculators to nd the standard deviation. To learn to use this feature, study the manual that came with your calculator. All calculators require (a) that you clear the statistical storage area (sometimes this is done by entering the statistical mode), (b) that you enter each data value with a special key such as M +, (c) that you press the x key for the average and the key for the standard deviation. In passing, we note that in some variations of the standard deviation formula, there is an n rather than an n 1 in the denominator of the formula. For our competency requirement, we will count either formula correct. With practice, you can be expert at calculating the standard deviation. Nevertheless, the calculation itself gives little insight into the signicance of the term. Looking at the formula reveals that the SD is a measure of how far the data values lie from their average; the larger the standard deviation, the more spread out the data is. However, statisticians usually attach much more meaning to the SD. If the data values are normally distributed1 (and many times, they are) then 68% of the data values will lie within one standard deviation on either side of their mean, i.e. 34% will be on each side of the mean. See the Figure 4. Moreover, 98% will lie within two standard deviations on either side of the mean and almost 100% will lie within three standard deviations. If we measured the height of 75 students and calculated the mean to be 67 inches and the standard deviation to be 3 inches, then we would expect that about 68% of all students would have heights between 64 inches and 70 inches (one standard deviation on either side of the mean). We emphasize that 68% of all normally distributed data falls within one standard deviation of the mean has the same meaning as the statement that if you ip a coin a number of times, one half of the ips will be heads. Both statements are probabilistic and are meant in an average sense. 1 Normally distributed means that the data is drawn from the normal distribution, i.e. a frequency plot of such data would have the familiar bell shape. Average of data samples are usually normally distributed. 6 68% of data 34% mean mean + σ Figure 4: The number line showing one and two standard deviations of either side of the mean for normally distributed data. To learn more about statistical calculations, you may read any elementary statistics book and your calculator manual. The following books are easily understood. 2 Your own calculator manual for standard deviations. Mosteller, F., Rourke, R.E.D., Thomas, G.B., Probability with Statistical Applications, 2nd ed. Addison-Wesley, 1970 Simple Algebra Important aspects of algebra deal with the straight line and with solving simple equations. To solve equations, you must isolate the unknown on one side of the equation. This isolation is accomplished by adding or multiplying both sides of the equation by the same quantity. If the two sides are equal at the beginning, they will remain equal as long as you perform the same operation to both sides of the equation. Thus if 5x 4 = 7x + 14; we may add 4 to both sides, giving 5x = 7x + 18: Then we may subtract 7x from both sides to obtain 2x = 18: Finally, dividing both sides by 2, we obtain x = 9: This general method works for all equations. Keep in mind that you must do the same operation to both sides of the equation at each step. There are many uses for the line and its equation. The simplest form of the equation for a line is y = mx + b: 7 There are several forms of the equation, but they can all be reduced to the one above by multiplication and addition. I suggest that most people would be nd it easier to remember only the one form. In the form above, m is the slope of the line. If the value of x is increased by 1, then m is added to the value of y . Among the questions which can be asked about the line are: identify the slope from a specic equation, nd the equation given the coordinates of two points on the line, nd the equation of the line given the slope and the coordinates of a single point on the line. All of these questions can be answered by using the form of the equation given above. (a) Given: the equation 3x 5y = 10: Find the slope Solution: Put the equation in standard form. 3 y= x 5 2: Then, the slope = 3=5, the coeÆcient of x. (b) Given: the line passes through the points whose coordinates are (2; 3); (4; 2). Find the equation. Solution: Begin with y = mx + b and substitute the values for x; y . 3 = 2m + b 2 = 4m + b (2; 3) (4; 2) First, solve for m by subtracting the two equations to eliminate b. 5 = 2m 5 2 Now return to the rst equation and substitute m = 5=2 and solve for b. 5 b = 8 and y = x + 8: 2 (Check the answer by substituting (2; 3); (4; 2) into the equation to make sure they work.) m= (c) Given: m = 3, and that the line passes through (4; 7). Find the equation. Solution: Start with y = mx + b. Substitute for m and the coordinates of the point. 7 = 3(4) + b Therefore, y = 3x b = 5: 5. For help in algebra, your own book is a good rst resource. Otherwise, one of the following may be helpful. 8 3 Fisher, Robert C. and Ziebur, Allen D. Integrated algebra trigonometry and analytic geometry, 4th ed., Prentice Hall, 1982. Ayres, Frank, Schaum's Outline of Theory and problems of rst year college algebra. Calculator usage You should be familiar with the most commonly used keys on your own calculator. These include +; ; ; ; y x ; , Store, Recall, and (). Most of us use the rst four routinely. One cause for error in calculator usage is the habit of writing intermediate results and re-entering that result. Because people often round these written values, large errors can occur if two nearly equal numbers must be subtracted. There is also the increased possibility of a copy error. The way to avoid such errors is to use either the () or the Store, Recall keys. For example, 8:378 4:452 6:219 5:977 might be found by calculating the numerator, writing down the result, calculating the denominator, writing this result, re-entering the numerator, pressing , re-entering the denominator and pressing =. This is a highly ineÆcient method and may produce the errors mentioned above. The following sequence of key strokes produces the result without writing down anything; the sequence uses the () keys. (8:378 6:219) (4:452 5:977) = The same result can be obtained by using the Store and Recall keys (these keys may have a dierent name on your calculator). Many calculators have a number of storage areas (called registers) for numbers. Read your manual and practice doing calculations without re-entering results. You will be asked to do a complicated calculation and nd the answer correct to a large number of signicant digits. The best way to nd such answers is to avoid data re-entry. The y x key is the exponential key; it is used to raise numbers to a power. To evaluate 2:364:52, the following key strokes are required: 2:36 y x 4:52 =. The result is 48.47996. One reason to use this key is to answer questions like how much money will I have in the bank in 16 years if the interest rate is 5% per year and I deposit $25. The amount is 25(1 + :05)16 = 25(1:05)16 = 54:57. A similar question is how many fruit ies will be alive in three days if their population doubles every 6 hours and there are 18 ies initially. Solution: 3 days = 72 hours = 72/6 = 12 generations. Number of ies = 18(2)12 = 73728: Questions about the solution process for such problems as interest and population will be explained later. At the moment, we are concerned only with the use of the y x key. Some times you will want to evaluate an expression like 3:2 7:6 . In this case, the operations are done the same way except 7:6 must be entered into the calculator. This 7:6 does not indicate subtraction but rather a negative 9 number. To enter a negative number, enter the number as positive followed by , (on my calculator the key is CHS, standing for CHange Sign). The proper sequence of key strokes is 3:2 y x 7:2 = You will get 0:00023063 for an answer. The only reference that will help you to use your calculator is the manual that came with it. If the ideas above are new to you, work some of the exercises in the calculator manual. These manuals usually have solved examples. 4 Areas and Volumes A frequent use of mathematics is for the calculation of areas and volumes. This activity is called mensuration. In many, perhaps most, instances an exact formula is not required because an estimate of the quantity is good enough. Questions such as how much wallpaper or paint is required for a particular wall, how many gallons of water does the jacuzzi hold, do not require exact answers, but the estimation must be good enough to avoid unnecessary expense. The simplest formula for area is the one for the area of a rectangle, see panel (a) of Fig. 5. The formula is height b 2 height height base (a) b base 1 (b) (c) Figure 5: (a) A Rectangle, (b) A Parallelogram, (c) A Trapezoid. Area = b h = base height: In most cases, the base and the height must be measured in the same units (inches, feet, yards, meters, etc.) so that area is measured in units which are the square of the length unit. Fabric is usually sold in square yards; the amount of surface covered by paint is given in square feet. If the height and base are not in the same units, then you must convert one or both to a common unit. For example, a driveway might be 8 feet wide and 45 yards long. The width of a sidewalk might be measured in inches while its length would be measured in feet. If you had an oer to cover a sidewalk with brick, it would be sensible to calculate how much was being charged per square foot of walkway. It would be necessary to change the width of the walk to feet in order to use the formula for the area of the long, skinny rectangle of a walk. The area of a walk which is 30 inches wide and 25 yards long is 187.5 square feet. As a matter of fact, this is the approximate area of the walk even if it is curved so long as the 10 length is measured along the curve. A gure whose area formula is similar to the rectangle is parallelogram shown in panel (b) of Fig. 5 . The formula for area is again baseheight, but you must notice that the height is measured perpendicular to the base. Finally, there is the trapezoidal gure shown in panel (c). A trapezoid has two bases (the parallel sides) of diering length. These lengths are designated b1 and b2 in the gure. The area is the height times the average length of the bases. b + b2 : Area of trapezoid = h 1 2 The formula for the area of a triangle is easily deduced from any of the panels in Fig. 5; by looking at the dotted lines in Fig. 5, we see that area of the triangle is one half of the area of a rectangle or parallelogram or is the same as the area of a trapezoid that one base equal to zero. Any of these observations leads to the formula 1 Area of triangle = bh: 2 The area of circles and more complicated gures can be found by approximating them with rectangles. Indeed, this exactly what is done in calculus. For our purposes, relatively crude approximations will suÆce. Look at the circle in Fig. 6. The circle is contained precisely in a square whose area is d2 . It d (a) d2 d 1 (b) Figure 6: (a) A circle inscribed in a square. (b) An ellipse inscribed in a rectangle. is obvious that the area of the circle is somewhat less than that of the square. Estimate how much less by making a guess about the fraction of the area of the square which covered by the circle. I would guess 3=4 is covered. Using this, we have 3 Area of circle d2 : 4 Perhaps it is as easy to remember the exact formula for the area of the circle. If you do remember d2 =4, you can can calculate that our approximate area is about 4.5% too small. For the ellipse inscribed in the rectangle, we use the same guess 3 Area of ellipse d1 d2 : 4 Most people do not know the exact formula for the area of the ellipse but the formula is similar to the one for a circle. The area of an ellipse is d1 d2 =4; 11 and again the estimate is 4.5% too small. For a more irregular shape that has no bounding rectangle, estimate the area by area by dividing the shape into a number of approximating rectangles, trapezoids, or triangles. If the shape is plotted to scale, you must take the scale factor into account in order to calculate the area properly. We will have more to say about these factors when we talk about Ratio and Proportion later. Perimeter of areas can be estimated by approximating the boundary by a sequence of straight lines and then either measuring the lines or calculating their lengths by using the theorem of Pythagoras for the relation of the sides of a right triangle. If a; b; c are the sides and hypotenuse of a right triangle respectively, Pythagoras stated that the quantities are related by a2 + b2 = c2 : In addition to using this formula to nd the lengths, it is frequently used by carpenters to nd a right angle, using the numbers 3, 4, 5 for the sides of the triangle. Since these numbers are related by the formula above the associated triangle must be a right triangle. The funny thing about the English system of units is that it may be relatively easy to nd the area of certain shapes and rather diÆcult to express the area in the units which are commonly used. An example is the acre. A typical city lot is about 100 feet by 150 feet, or 15,000 square feet. But lots are usually discussed in terms of acres. The problem is that the size of the acre is not related the to square of the linear measure in a simple way. The original denition of an acre was the amount of land which could be plowed by a yoke of oxen in a day2 . This came to be standardized as piece of land measuring 4 poles by 40 poles. A pole is 16.5 feet. Using this measurement, you can calculate that there are 43,560 square feet in an acre. There are various ways of remembering or calculating the number of square feet in a acre. I remember that there are 640 acres in a square mile and that a mile is 5280 feet in length. From there, one can easily compute that an acre is 43,560 square feet. Find the size of a square which contains an acre. Volumes of simple shapes are also important for quantitative competence. We will stick to simple box-like gures as shown in Fig. 7. Using the information from the gure, we have V = abc = length width height: Many things have the basic shape of the box, e.g. an excavation for a basement, concrete in a driveway or sidewalk; in these cases, you must again be careful that all of the dimensions are given in the same units, but then the calculation is straight forward. The common unit for concrete and for dirt (to be dug for a basement) is the cubic yard. A more complicated volume is the one mathematicians call a cylinder, illustrated in Fig. 7(b). The base of a cylinder may be any shape whatsoever, 2 Oxford English Dictionary 12 a height h width b s base d area of base (a) (b) (c) Figure 7: (a) A box. (b) A general cylinder. (c) A box shape with the bottom not parallel to the top. but the sides must be composed of lines which are parallel to one another. The formula for the volume is V = area of base height: If the one of the bases is not perpendicular to the sides, as in case of swimming pool with a sloping bottom, the average height should be used in place of the height. This average height might have to be estimated or guessed. In the case of the swimming pool shown in Fig. 7(c), the volume is given by V = ab(s + d)=2: Similar to area, many things are sold in units of the cube of the length. However, some things which are really sold by volume are measured in strange units like uid ounces, gallons, or bushels. It is relatively easy to measure the sides and depth of a swimming pool and calculate its volume in cubic feet, but unless you know a conversion factor it is baing to express the volume in gallons. If you know that a gallon of paint coats 400 square feet, it is not simple to calculate the thickness of the coating without knowing the number of cubic inches in the gallon. In the metric system, the basic unit of volume is the liter, which is 1000 cm3 ; knowing that a liter of paint will coat 8 meter2 , leads to a simple calculation of the coating thickness. The story of the denition of the strange English units and there relation to the linear dimensions is sometimes interesting, like the acre, and sometimes frustrating like the gallon. In fact, the origin of the gallon appears to be unknown3 . \The term derives in English from Old French/medieval Latin, and is thought by most authorities to refer to some unit borrowed from Celtic sources { that is, the Gallic/Gaelic unit4 . Some sources relate the word to gall like the bulge seen on some trees. What is certain is that the unit is very old. The size of the gallon is sometimes related to the weight of water; a gallon of water in the United States weighs about 8 pounds (this is a handy number to remember), but a gallon in Canada is larger 3 see Oxford English Dictionary. 4 Dent Dictionary of Measurement, J.M. Dent, London 1994 13 than a U.S. gallon. Perhaps these anomalies exist because of the various kinds of weights used over the centuries. At any rate, the denition of a gallon is now 231 cubic inches and the only way to get that number is to remember it or look it up. The number is very close to the volume of a cylinder whose diameter is 7 inches and whose height is 6 inches (in fact, if you take = 22=7, the calculated volume of the cylinder is exactly 231 cubic inches. Cylinders of that size would have been easy to make, as would cylinders with half the diameter to give the quart. Nevertheless, conversions would have been simpler had the gallon been 216 cubic inches (a cube 6 inches on the side) because 8 of them would have made one cubic foot. To summarize, if you want to know how much hot water is necessary for your jacuzzi, you will have to compute the volume in cubic feet or cubic inches and use the fact that one gallon is 231 cubic inches to nd out the number of gallons. A rather challenging and practical problem is to answer a question like this: is it cheaper to buy a gallon of gasoline in Canada for $1.85 or in the U.S. for $1.35? A Canadian gallon (the Imperial gallon) is 277.25 cubic inches and a Canadian dollar is worth only a fraction of a U.S. dollar, say 87 cents. You can gure it out. You can also calculate how many gallons of paint are required to cover an acre if the coating is to be 0.004 inch thick. 5 Ratio and Proportion The idea of ratio and proportion is extremely useful for all kinds of every day calculations. Such calculations are made to reduce the size of a recipe, to change the size of a dress pattern, to scale maps, and in many more situations. We will illustrate with some examples: 1. A board 12 feet long weighs 15 lbs. How much will a board of the same size by 16 feet long weigh? Solution: Let x be the weight of the 16 ft board. Then x 16 = : 12 15 Solving for x, we nd x = 20 lbs. 2. If the distance from Wheaton to Chicago is 40 km and 16 km is 10 miles, how far is it from Wheaton to Chicago in miles? Solution: Let x be the distance in miles. 40 x = 16 10 Solving for x, we get x = 25 miles. You can reduce mistakes by noting that on one side of the equality we have kilometers over kilometers and on the other side miles over miles, making each side dimensionless. 14 3. If it costs 2 marks to drive 40 km, nd the cost per mile to drive. Assume 1 mark = $1.50. Solution: From above, we found 40 km = 25 miles. Also 2 marks = $3.00. Therefore, the cost per mile is 3.00/25 = $0.12 per mile. 4. Standing at point A, you notice that the top of a ag pole and the top of an 8 foot pole are in exact alignment. See Fig. 8 for complete dimensions. Find the height of the ag pole. Solution: Set up the proportion as follows. X 8 22 60 Figure 8: Flag Pole and 8 foot pole. x 8 = 22 60 Solving, we nd x = 21:8 feet. When doing conversions such as kilometers per minute to miles per hour, convert each dimension separately and then divide to obtain the result. Convert 75 miles per hour to kilometers per minute. Solution: From above, 16 km = 10 miles. This implies that 75 miles = 120 km. Also 1 hour = 60 minutes. Therefore, 75 miles per hour = 120=60 = 2 km per minute. We note that if all of the linear dimensions of an surface are scaled by factor of k , the area is scaled by a factor of k 2 . If all of the dimensions of a solid are scaled by k , the volume of the solid is scaled by k 3 . These important relations are illustrated in Fig. 9 6 Exponential Decay and Growth What do the population of an insect colony and the money in your savings account have in common? Answer: both grow exponentially. A quantity grows exponentially if in a xed period of time, the amount increases by a xed percentage. If you put $100 into a savings account that pays 5% per year, in one year you will have 100 + :05(100) = 105. If you leave the $105 in the bank for another year, you will have 105 + :05(105) = 110:25. These calculations can be 15 k2 A A kc c V b k3 V kb a ka Figure 9: (a) A rectangle whose sides are both multiplied by k . (b) A box whose sides are multiplied by k . Notice how the area and the volume of the new gures are multiplied by k 2 and k 3 respectively. done more eÆciently by noting that 100 + :05(100) = 100(1:05). Therefore, at the end of two years, the amount is 100(1:05)2: you can see that if you waited n years, you would have 100(1:05)n: Any quantity, A, which gets larger according to the law Ak x where k > 1 is said to grow exponentially. If 0 < k < 1, the quantity A is said to decay exponentially because k x gets smaller as x gets larger. In the case of a savings account, the bank usually gives the interest rate for the year. However, they may compound the interest more often, e.g. quarterly or monthly. This is always an advantage for the customer. If your $100 was deposited in a bank that compounded quarterly at the 5% per year rate, you would have 100(1:0125)4 = 105:09 at the end of the year. Note that if the yearly rate is 5%, the bank usually takes this to mean that the quarterly rate is :05=4 = :0125, the 4 in the exponent is there because there are four quarters in the year. In two years, you would have 100(1:0125)8 = 110:45: The eect of more frequent compounding mounts the longer one leaves the money in the account. Sometimes a bank that compounds quarterly will say that the nominal yearly rate is 5% but the \eective" rate is 5.09% (note 5.09% is the amount that would have to be paid if the compounding was yearly rather than quarterly). On some credit cards, the interest is 1.5% per month. This means that if you have an unpaid balance of $100 each month for a year, you will owe 100(1:015)12 = 119:56, giving an \Eective" rate of 19.56%. The exponential law is also used in idea of radioactive decay. For instance, we are told that the Perry Mastodon is 11,000 years old on the basis of radioactive carbon dating. The idea is that the amount of radioactive carbon which is present in the mastodon began to reduce at the time of its death. This carbon reduces to 1/2 its amount every 5700 years. 5700 years is the \half-life" of 16 radioactive carbon. The law looks A = A0 (1=2)n where A0 is the amount present in the living animal, n is the number of half-lives since the animal died, and A is the amount of radio carbon present after n half lives. Since a chemist can determine A, and A0 is xed, it is possible to determine n and then the age. We will be concerned only with the idea that the law is exponential. A = A0 (1=2)n where A0 is the original amount and n is the number of half-lives. Example: Suppose a watch has a radioactive dial and the material of the dial has a half-life of 12 years. What fraction of the original material will be left after 18 years. Solution: 18 years is 18=12 = 1:5 half lives. There will be (1=2)1:5 = 0:3535 or about 35% of the material remains. Radioactive materials have half-lives ranging from millenia to small fractions of a second. Population problems are similar to either growth as in savings accounts or radioactive decay depending upon whether or not more people are being born than are dying. One sometimes hears a statement that our school system has been growing at the rate of 7% per year. If the enrollment was 4,750 when such growth began, say 6 years ago, then the enrollment is now 4750(1:07)6. It is customary to evaluate the growth exactly this way rather than to bother to truncate the enrollment to the nearest whole number each year. You will nd information on exponential growth in your calculator manual and your college algebra book. 7 Spreadsheets A spreadsheet is a computer program which is used to manipulate numbers. Nearly anything that can be done with numbers can be done with a spreadsheet including graphing, calculating standard deviations, and many many other operations. Most of the operations can be done with one or two mouse clicks or commands. A spreadsheet might be called a \number processor" to put it on an equal footing with a word processor. Like word processors, each spreadsheet has its own set of commands but all spreadsheets are similar. At the moment, we do not have the capability to test you on a variety of spreadsheet operations, but we will explain what a spreadsheet is and how the formulas are written. My conceptual view of a spreadsheet is a large sheet of graph paper. Each square, called a cell, is addressed by telling in which column and in which row the cell lies. The columns are named A; B; C; : : : and the rows are designated by 1, 2, 3, . . . . Thus, B 3 refers to the cell that is in the second column and the third row. Into the cells, we may put text, numbers, or formulas which refer to contents of other cells. The text entries serve to identify the columns for the reader and will not concern us. If the formula B 3 + A2 is found in cell C 7 then when numbers are entered into cells A2 and B 3, their sum will immediately appear in cell C 7. If we entered the numbers given in the statistics section in cells A1 through A16, we could compute the average by writing the formula @sum(A1::A16)/16 in some other cell, say A17. We could then make 17 1 2 3 .. . A 97.6 98.2 100.7 .. . B A1 A2 A3 .. . A17 A17 A17 C .. . Figure 10: A spreadsheet showing several cells; column A contains numbers while column B contains formulas. another column of numbers that contained the square of the dierence between the numbers in A and their average. We could write in cell B 1 the formula (A1 A17)2 , in B 2 the formula (A2 A17)2 and follow this pattern all the way to row 16. You will notice that we must change the row number of the rst A, i.e. A1, A2, etc. but A17 is the same in each row of the column B . When all of this is complete, in B 17, you write @sum(B 1::B 16)/15 and you have most of the standard deviation calculated; you still have to nd the square root. If you did all of this and then wanted to change the numbers in column A you could do so without changing anything else as long as you have any data set with 16 numbers. This sounds like a lot of work, but it is made much easier by the fact that the formulas in column B need be written only once and they can then be copied with the powerful copy commands in the spreadsheet; these commands will change the row number automatically. Perhaps you have been wondering about @sum(A1::A16). This is a command which tells the spreadsheet to Add the numbers in cells A1 to cell A16; the A1::A16 gives the range of the numbers. We can also make graphs using one column as x and another as y . Spreadsheets commonly make line graphs, bar graphs, and pie graphs. These graphs are now easily incorporated into word processor documents. Such incorporation makes it easier to discuss and describe quantitative information. An appropriate graph is often the best way to describe such data. Roughly, the procedure is to nd the graphing icon and click. You must also specify which column is to be used as x and which is y . If you have access to a spreadsheet, you should try to learn to make graphs with it. 8 Counting Counting seems like an especially simple task|1, 2, 3, . . . , what could be easier? However, when the counting task exceeds the simple enumeration processes, it can become among the most challenging in mathematics. A question like how many distinct license plates can be produced using exactly three letters followed by three digits is hard to do by simple counting because we would have to list all of the plates rst and then do the counting. The list of plates would be a very long one. However, a problem like this can help us distill principles that will help us in thinking about more diÆcult problems. 18 The two principles that we will use are the multiplication principle and the addition principle. The multiplication principle is stated: If an operation can be performed in n ways, and after it is performed, a second operation can be performed in m ways, then the two operations can be performed together in n m ways. This principle can be generalized to any number of operations. Applying the principle to the license plate problem above, we see six operations: choosing a rst, second, third letter, and rst, second, third digit. Each letter can be chosen in 26 ways (all letters are allowed for each choice) and each digit can be chosen in 10 ways. Therefore, the number of ways a plate can be made is 26 26 26 10 10 10 = 17; 576; 000: The addition principle is stated: If two operations are mutually exclusive (if one is done, the other cannot be done) and the rst can be done in n ways and the second in m ways, then one operation or the other can be done in n + m ways. For example, you may go to an icecream store where you can get either a two-dip or a three-dip cone. All cones are made from chocolate, vanilla or strawberry. You may have two or three dips of the same avor if you wish. How many kinds of cones are available. The answer is there are 3 3 two-dip cones and 3 3 3 three-dip cones. If you choose a two-dipper, you cannot have a three-dip cone. How many choices do you have? The answer is 9 + 27 = 36. These two principles can be applied separately and together to solve many challenging counting problems problems. Here are a couple of recurring types of counting situations. First, suppose I have fteen books, all dierent, on my shelf. Let us assume that the fteen authors each have a separate initial from the beginning of the alphabet, A through O. How many ways can it select 5 books from the shelf? So ACDEL is one selection and DECAL is another and so forth. The total number is the number of ways that I can select the rst book times the number of ways I can select the second book times . . . times the number of ways I can select the fth book. That number is 15 14 13 12 11 = 360; 360. Here, the order of the selection of the books has been considered important. Now suppose that you are going to select ve books and mail them to your friend. How many possible selections can be made? Now, the order in which the books are selected makes no dierence. ACDEL is the same set of ve books as DECAL or LECAD. The answer is the number of ways the books can be select when order is important divided by the number of ways those selected books can be arranged. The number is 360360=(5 4 3 2 1) = 3003: The distinction between order being important or not is a crucial one and you will need to think about. If three members are being selected to take a petition to the principal of the school, then the order of selection is unimportant. If you are selecting candidates for president, vice president, and secretary, then order is important. 19 9 Dimensions and Units To be quantitatively competent in our society, you need to be somewhat familiar with the way things are measured and the units of measurement. While this topic is familiar to many of you, for others it will be helpful to have a few basics spelled out. In the USA, we use the English system of units: inches, feet, yards, pounds, tons, seconds, hours, etc., while most of the rest of the world uses metric units like centimeters, meters, kilometers, grams, kilograms, etc. We all use the same units of time. You should be familiar with the English system and with some of the equivalents in the metric system. If you do not know the English equivalences below, you should study them carefully. English 12 inches 3 feet 5280 feet 16 ounces 2000 pounds English 1 foot 1 yard 1 mile 1 pound 1 ton The following are some equivalences between English and metric units. English 1 inch 1 mile 2.2 pounds Metric 2.54 centimeters 1.6 kilometers 1 kilogram With these equivalences, you can gure out units of volume and area. For instances, you can nd out how many inches are in a mile or how many ounces are in a gram. In English units, there are measures of area and volume that are not readily related to the measures of distance. Such measures as acre and gallon are not simply related to length measures. However, it is fairly easy to remember that 640 acres is the equivalent of one square mile and that 7.5 gallons are about 1 cubic foot. Unit conversions can be handled eectively by noticing that if the units are written with each equivalence, they can be divided, multiplied and cancelled in exactly the same way as fractions. To nd how many centimeters are in a mile, you could write 1 mile = 5280 ft (1) 1 ft = 12 in (2) 1 in = 2:54 cm (3) If we substitute equation (2) into equation (1), we obtain 1 mile = 5280 12 in = 63; 360 in: (4) Next substitute equation (3) into equation (4) to obtain 1 mile = 63; 360 2:54 cm = 160; 934:4 cm: 20 (5) This method always works. The units may be treated as algebraic quantities. Here is a last example. There are 640 acres in a square mile.How many square feet are there in an acre? 640 acre = (1 mi) 2 1 mi =5280 ft Therefore, 640 acre = (5280 ft) 2 = 27; 878; 400 ft2 and finally, 10 Review of Functions and Calculus Concepts 22 d • Quotient Rule: dx • Exponential Rule: µ f (x) g(x) ¶ = g(x)f 0 (x) − f (x)g 0 (x) [g(x)]2 d f (x) e = ef (x) · f 0 (x) dx The derivative is used to find maximum values and minimum values of a function. For any function f , a point c in the domain where f 0 (c) = 0 or f 0 (c) is undefined is called a critical point of the function. Recall that if a function f is continuous at a point x = a then its graph has no jumps or holes at x = a. If c is a critical point of a continuous function f , then the First-Derivative Test or Second-Derivative Test can be used to determine whether or not f has a maximum or minimum value at f . First-Derivative Test: Suppose c is a critical point of a continuous function f . If f 0 changes sign from positive to negative at c, then f has a local maximum at c. If f 0 changes sign from negative to positive at c, then f has a local minimum at c. Second-Derivative Test: If f 0 (c) = 0 and f 00 (c) < 0, then f has a local maximum at c. If f 0 (c) = 0 and f 00 (c) > 0, then f has a local minimum at c. If we are given a velocity function v(t) and want to find a position function s(t), then we need to find a function whose derivative is v(t), that is, find an antiderivative. We say that F (x) is an antiderivative of f (x) if F 0 (x) = f (x). For example, an antiderivative of 3x2 is x3 . Note that x3 + 1 and x3 + π are also antiderivatives of 3x2 . The most general antiderivative of 3x2 is x3 + C where Z 3 C is any constant. The antiderivative of x is denoted by 3x2 dx, which is called the indefinite integral of 3x2 . There are many rules for finding antiderivatives, but two that follow readily from the differentiation rules given earlier are the following: R n+1 • Antidifferentiation Power Rule: for any choice of constant n, with n 6= −1, xn dx = xn+1 + C. Z 1 • Antidifferentiation Exponential Rule: for any choice of constant r 6= 0, erx dx = erx + C. r Let f be a continuous function defined for a ≤ x ≤ b. Then the definite integral of f from a to b, Z b f (x) dx, gives the signed area bounded by x = a, x = b, y = f (x), and the x−axis, i.e., the denoted a area above the x−axis minus the area below the x−axis. It is computed using the following theorem: Fundamental Theorem of Integral Calculus: For a continuous function f on an interval [a, b], ¯b ¯ f (x) dx = F (x)¯ = F (b) − F (a), where F is any antiderivative of f . a Z 2a 15 1 24 x4 ¯¯2 . Below are some of the important applications of − = x3 dx = For example, ¯ = 4 4 4 4 1 1 the definite integral. Z b Z b [f (x) − g(x)] dx. • The area between two continuous curves f (x) ≥ g(x) on [a, b] is a Z b f (x) dx gives • If f is a probability density function for a continuous random variable X, then a the probability that the values of X are in [a, b]. y f (x) a x b P (a ≤ X ≤ b) Z • Since F 0 (x) = f (x), the Fundamental Theorem can be written as a b F 0 (x) dx = F (b) − F (a). This says that the definite integral of a rate of change of a function over [a, b] gives the total Z b s0 (t) dt = s(b) − s(a), the definite integral of change of the function over [a, b]. For example, velocity is the total change in position. a Examples (Section 10) and 3 < t < 4 since v(t) = 0 on those intervals. Example 3 If f (5) = 1, f 0 (5) = 6, g(5) = −3, and g 0 (5) = 2, find (f g)0 (5). Solution By the product rule, (f g)0 (x) = f 0 (x)g(x) + f (x)g 0 (x). So we have (f g)0 (5) = f 0 (5)g(5) + f (5)g 0 (5) = 6 · (−3) + 1 · 2 = −18 + 2 = −16 √ xg(x) where g(4) = 2 and g 0 (4) = −5, find f 0 (4). √ Solution We first rewrite x as x1/2 so that we can use the Power Rule. Then Example 4 If f (x) = d 1/2 x g(x) dx d 1/2 x · g(x) + x1/2 · g 0 (x) (by the Product Rule) = dx = 1/2 · x−1/2 · g(x) + x1/2 g 0 (x) (by the Power Rule) f 0 (x) = Thus f 0 (4) = 1 2 · 4−1/2 · g(4) + 41/2 · g 0 (4) = 1 2 · 1 2 · 2 + 2 · (−5) = − 19 2 . Example 5 Suppose that a mathematical model for the population of a city t years from now is P (t) = 28, 800t1/3 + 3, 000, 000. Find and interpret P (8), P 0 (8) and P 00 (8). Solution: Using the rules for differentiation, we find 1 · 28, 800 · t−2/3 3 = 9600t−2/3 , and P 0 (t) = P 00 (t) = −6400t−5/3 So P (8) = 28, 800(8)1/3 + 3, 000, 000 = 3, 057, 600, which will be the population of the city 8 years from now. We find P 0 (8) = 9600(8)−2/3 = 2400. Since P 0 (8) is the instantaneous rate of change of P (t) with respect to t when t = 8, in eight years the population of the city will be increasing at a rate of 2400 people per year. P 00 (8) = −6400(8)−5/3 = −200. After 8 years the growth rate is decreasing by about 200 people per year per year. In particular, since P 00 (8) < 0 and P 0 (8) > 0, after 8 years the population is growing but at a decreasing rate. Example 6 A rancher has 1000 feet of fence and wants to build a rectangular enclosure along a straight river. The side bordering the river does not require a fence. Find the dimensions of the field that will make the enclosure as large as possible. RIVER y y x Solution: We want to maximize the area A of the field. Let variables stand for the length and width: x = length (parallel to the river) y = width The problem becomes to maximize A = xy subject to the constraint x + y + y = 1000. We must express the area in terms of one variable. We use x = 1000 − 2y and substitute this into the area equation. This gives A = (1000 − 2y)y = 1000y − 2y 2 . Note that the domain of A is 0 < y < 500. In order to find the maximum of A we need to find the critical points of A, i.e., the points where A0 is zero or does not exist. Since A0 = 1000 − 4y we have must solve 1000 − 4y = 0 for y, and find y = 250. Since A00 = −4 < 0, the Second-Derivative Test shows that the area is indeed maximized when y = 250. Thus the dimensions for length are x = 1000 − 2(250) = 500 feet, and width y = 250 feet. ¶ Z µ 1 7 2 3x + 4x − 2 dx. Example 7 Find x Solution ¶ Z Z µ ¡ 7 ¢ 1 7 2 3x + 4x2 − x−2 dx 3x + 4x − 2 dx = x x3 x−1 x8 (by the antidifferentiation power rule) = 3 +4 − −1 3 8 3 8 4 3 1 x + x + +C = x 3 8 Example 8 An object is observed to have an initial velocity of 200 m/s and to be accelerating at a rate of 60 m/s2 . Find a formula for the velocity v(t). Solution Velocity is the antiderivative of acceleration. Since v 0 (t) = 60 we find v(t) = 60t + C for some constant C. We also know that v(0) = 200 which implies that C = 200. Thus v(t) = 60t + 200. Example 9 A sports car can accelerate from a standing start to a speed of v(t) = −0.09t2 + 6t feet per second after t seconds for 0 ≤ t ≤ 40. Find the distance the car will travel in the first 10 seconds. 3 2 Solution Since s0 (t) = v(t), we antidifferentiate v(t) to find s(t). Thus s(t) = − 0.09 3 t + 3t + c where c is the initial position which we will take to be 0. In the first 10 seconds the car will travel s(10) = −0.03(10)3 + 3(10)2 = 270 feet. Z Example 10 Find 3 x2 dx. 2 Solution Since f (x) = x2 is continuous on [2, 3] we can use the Fundamental Theorem. Z 2 3 19 27 8 1 1 ¯¯3 1 − = x2 dx = x3 ¯ = 33 − 23 = 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 Example 11 Write down the definite integral needed to find the area between y1 = x2 − 3x + 7 and y2 = 2x + 7. Solution By setting x2 − 3x + 7 = 2x + 7 we have x2 − 5x = 0 or x(x − 5) = 0. The two curves intersect Z 5 [(2x + 7) − (x2 − 3x + 7)] dx. at x = 0 and x = 5. Since y1 < y2 for 0 ≤ x ≤ 5, the area is given by 0 Example 12 The population of a small town is increasing at the rate of 2400e0.02t where t is the number of years since 1990 when the population was 30,000. What does this model predict the population will be in 2025? Solution Let P (t) be the population at year t, where t is the number of years since 1990. We are given that P 0 (t) = 2400e0.02t and P (0) = 30, 000. The total change in population from t = 0 to t = 35 is Z 35 2400 0.02t ¯¯35 0 e P (t) dt = given by ¯ = 120, 000(e0.02·35 − e0 ) ≈ 121, 650. Thus the population in 2025 0.02 0 0 would be 121,650+30,000=151,650. Example 13 Let X be defined as the number of inches of snow in a town during the first week of January in each year. Suppose that a meteorologist looks at past weather records and determines that the probability density function for X is f (x) = 6x(1 − x) on [0, 1]. Find the probability that the snowfall during the first week of January will be between 0 and 0.4 inches. Solution Z 0.4 6x(1 − x) dx P (0 ≤ X ≤ 0.4) = 0 Z 0.4 6x − 6x2 dx ¯0.4 ¯ = 3x2 − 2x3 ¯ = 0 0 = (0.48 − 0.128) − 0 = 0.352 Thus the probability that the snowfall will be between 0 and 0.4 inches during the first week of January is about 35%. SAMPLE TESTS (a) If Sammy leaves a 15% tip, write a formula that expresses how much Sammy will leave the waiter. (b) Write a formula that expresses how much Sammy will pay the cashier if the tax rate is 6.5%. 5. A loan of $100 is made at an interest rate of 1% per month. What amount must be repaid at the end of the year if no intermediate payments are made? 6. Fruit Flies multiply rapidly. Every three days their population increases by 40% (this rate accounts for deaths). If one starts with 100 fruit ies, how many will there be in 21 days? 7. An unethical merchant advertises that every item in the store will be sold at 30% o of the marked price. However, just before the sale begins, the merchant increases the price of each item by 25%. If an item was marked at $100 before the markup and sale, how much would one have to pay for it during the sale? 8. Determine a value for the variable x in each equation that makes the equation into a true statement. (a) 5(x (b) 2) = x 1 3 = x x 5 9. The spread of a certain u virus is growing linearly. If the number of cases grew from 200 on January 10 to 300 on January 14, on what date will the number reach 475? 10. A gallon contains 231 cubic inches. How many gallons are there in a cubic foot? 11. A agpole casts a 40 foot long shadow. At the same time a yardstick, held to the ground vertically, casts a shadow 5 feet long. How tall is the agpole? 12. A square piece of land which is 1/8 mile on a side contains exactly 10 acres. How many square feet are there in an acre? (1 mile = 5280 feet) 13. A straight line passes through the points (2; 5) and (6; 7). Find the slope of the line. 14. A teacher must choose two girls and two boys to represent the class. There are six girls and seven boys in the class. How many possible ways can the teacher make the choice? 22 15. Find the median of the following data set: 18 29 34 16 23 25 13 17 9 10 16. Suppose that you are planning to draw a box and whisker plot of the data for the previous problem. Where will the whiskers end? 17. It has been discovered that the average height of college students is 67 inches and that the standard deviation is 3 inches. Assuming the heights are normally distributed, what percentage of students do we expect to be taller than 70 inches? 18. A room is 20 feet long and 17 feet wide. The ceiling is 8 feet high. On one wall, there is sliding door which is 8 feet wide and 80 inches tall. The walls are to be papered with paper that costs $8 for 32 square feet. The door is to be covered with material that costs $28 per square yard. Assuming there is a 10% wasteage on both the wall paper and the drapery material, how much will the materials cost for decorating the room? 19. A baseball player can throw a baseball from center eld to home plate with an average speed of 60 miles per hour. If the ball travels 300 feet, how many seconds is the ball in the air? 20. Between 2 and 4 o'clock, 3.2 inches of snow falls. If the snow continues until 8 o'clock, how much additional snow will fall? Answers: 1. B1: 5/6, B2: 1/6, B3: 14, B5: 100; 2. 1661:070737; 3. (a) 25, (b) 13.42 or 12; 4. (a) 0.15M, (b) 1.065M; 5. $112.68; 6. 1054; 7. $87.50; 8. (a) 2.5, (b) 15/2; 9. January 21; 10. 7.48; 11. 24 feet; 12. 43,560; 13. 1/2; 14. 315; 15. 17.5; 16. 9, 34; 17. 16%; 18. $330.65 (door is not painted); 19. 3.4 sec; 20. 6.4in 23 Sample Competency Test II 1. Compute the values that would be generated by the column B formulas shown on the spreadsheet below: 1 2 3 A 2 3 4 B A1+A2*A3 A2+B1/A1 A1+B1/B2 Answers: (B1) (B2) (B3) 2. The following scores were made on a 50-point math test: 43 34 29 39 24 46 43 39 48 31 34 43 36 37 38 40 (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) Find the mean score. Find the median score. Find the standard deviation of the scores. Find the rst quartile of the scores. Draw a box and whisker plot to represent the data set. 3. The formula to convert Celsius temperature to Fahrenheit is F = 9C=5 + 32. If the Fahrenheit temperature is 5, what is the Celsius temperature? 4. How much money must you put into into a savings account today in order to have $5000 in ve years? Assume the annual interest rate is 5%, and interest is compounded monthly. Ignore taxes. 5. A person deposits $1000 in the bank. Two years later, the person withdraws $200. How much money will the person have in the bank 6 years after the original deposit? Assume the bank pays 6% interest, compounded annually. 6. A pizza parlor oers a choice of eight dierent toppings, but allows a maximum of four toppings on any pizza. No double toppings are permitted, and every pizza has cheese, which is not one of the toppings. How many dierent types of pizzas could be ordered? 7. Using your calculator, nd the value of the following expression. Keep as many decimal places as your calculator can produce. 1:4196:15=1:427 2:7 24 p 5:322:16= 97:79 8. Write an equation for the line that passes through the points (1; 2) and ( 3; 4). 9. A quart of milk occupies 57.75 cubic inches. How many gallons of milk ll a cubic foot? 10. While on a 500 kilometer car trip in Canada, a driver uses 60 liters of gasoline. How many miles per gallon did the car average? (Hint: 0.625 miles = 1 km, 0.264 gallons = 1 liter) 11. The length, width and height measurements in feet of a large box are 4, 3, 6. The outside surface including the top and bottom of the box are to be painted. If a quart of paint covers 80 square feet, how many gallons of paint should be purchased? 12. Air quality regulations in a certain town require that room capacities in new buildings must be set low enough to allow 150 cubic feet of space for each person in the room. If the room is 30 feet long, 40 feet wide, and 12 feet high, how many people will be allowed in the room? 13. A 10 foot ladder and a 16 foot ladder both lean against a building and both form the same angle with the ground. The taller ladder reaches a point 14 feet above the ground. What height on the building is reached by the shorter ladder? 14. A person has scores of 51, 68, 77, and 75 on four tests. What score must this person obtain on the fth test to achieve an average of 71? 15. A package courier charges $1.50 for the rst ounce and $0.60 for each additional ounce or fraction thereof. The charge for a certain small package is $5.10. How much did the package weigh? 16. A ight is scheduled from A to B. The normal time is 5 hours at a speed of 500 miles per hour. After three hours, the pilot must slow to 400 miles per hour due to weather. How late will the plane be? 17. The University of Chicago plans to increase its annual undergraduate costs by 1.5%. The administration claims that the increase will amount to $480 additional charge for each student. What is the current annual cost for each student? 18. A merchant adds 35% markup to the wholesale price. During a one day sale, the merchant oers a 20% discount o of the marked retail price. What will a customer pay for a shirt that originally cost the merchant $18 at wholesale? 19. The table below reects a sample of Wheaton College student opinion on a certain issue. 25 Frosh/Soph Jr/Sr Favor 35 62 Oppose 72 21 What percentage of students were Frosh/Soph? 20. If the set of test scores are normally distributed with a mean of 70 and a standard deviation of 15, what is the probability of obtaining a score higher than 55? 21. During a ve year period, a company had the following prots (in millions of dollars). Make a line graph to display the results. Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 Prot 155 170 205 175 190 Answers: (1) B1: 14; B2: 10; B3: 3.4; (2)a: 37.75; b: 38.5; c: 6.36 or 6.16; d: 34; (3) 15; (4) $3896.03; (5) $1166.02; (6) 163; (7) 18.73215545 (8) y + 2 = 3(x 1)=2; (9) 7.48; (10) 19.7; (11) 1 gal; (12) 96; (13) 8.75; (14) 84; (15) between 6 and 7 oz; (16) 0.5 hours; (17) $32000; (18) $19.44; (19) 56% (20) 0.84 26 FUNCTIONS AND CALCULUS SAMPLE EXAM QUESTIONS 6. Find the critical points of f (x) = x3 + 3x2 − 24x. (a) 0, 2, −4 (b) 2, −4 (c) 1, 2 (d) 2, 4, 8 √ −3 ± 105 (e) 0, 2 7. For the function f (x) which is graphed below, which of the following values is the greatest? y y = f (x) x −2 (a) 0 (b) f 0 (−2) −1 1 (c) f 0 (1) 2 (d) f 0 (4) 3 4 (e) f (−2) 8. Suppose you are given the following information about f 0 (x). At which value(s) of x does f (x) have a local maximum? x<0 x=0 1<x<2 x=2 x>2 − 0 + 0 − f 0 (x) (a) x = 0 (b)x = 1 (c) x = 2 (d) x = 1 and x = 2 (e) f has no local maximum 9. A ball’s acceleration at time t is given by a(t) = 16t and its initial velocity is 35. Which of the following functions gives the velocity v(t)? (a) 35t2 + 16 (b) 16t2 + 35 Z b 10. Evaluate 9x8 dx. (c) 8t2 + 35 (d) 8t2 + 35t + 35 0 (a) 72b7 (b) 9b9 (c) 91 b9 (d) b9 (e) −72b7 (e) 8t2 + 35t 11. A $10,000 car depreciates so that its value after t years is V (t) = 10, 000e−0.35t dollars. What is the rate of change of its value after 2 years? (a) decreasing by $1738 per year (b) decreasing by $3500 per year (c) decreasing by $4000 per year (d) decreasing by $4966 per year (e) decreasing by $9323 per year 12. An open top box with a square base x inches on each edge is to have a volume of 108 cubic inches. In order to find the dimensions of the box that can be made using the smallest amount of material, one would have to find the critical points of which of the following functions? (a) x2 + 432 x (b) 2x2 + 432 x2 (c) 2x2 + 108 x2 (d) x2 + 108 x (e) x2 + 432 x2 13. Suppose oil is being extracted from a well at a rate of 0.1e0.5t millions of barrels per year. At this rate how much oil will be extracted in the first five years? (a) 1.2 million barrels (b) 1.8 million barrels (d) 2.4 million barrels (e) 2.8 million barrels (c) 2.2 million barrels 14. In a 5 year study, the number of years that a patient can expect to survive after an experimental medical procedure is a random variable X with probability density function f (x) = What is the probability that a patient survives between 2 and 4 years? (a) 0.047 (b) 0.281 (c) 0.400 (d) 0.535 (e) 0.875 3 2 64 x on [0, 5]. 15. Which of the following definite integrals gives the area of the shaded region? f (x) y −6 −5−4 −3 −2 −1 Z g(x) 1 2 3 4 5 6 x 7 7 [f (x) − g(x)] dx (a) −6 Z 7 [g(x) − f (x)] dx (b) −6 Z Z −5 (c) [f (x) − g(x)] dx + Z −5 Z −5 −6 7 (e) [f (x) − g(x)] dx 6 Z 6 [g(x) − f (x)] dx + Z 7 [g(x) − f (x)] dx + −6 (d) Z 6 [f (x) − g(x)] dx + −5 7 [g(x) − f (x)] dx 6 |f 0 (x) − g 0 (x)| dx −6 4 Solutions to Sample Exam 1. (c) 10. (d) 2. (b) 11. (a) 3. (c) 12. (a) 4. (d) 13. (c) 5. (c) 6. (b) 14. (e) 7. (c) 15. (c) 8. (c) 9. (c)