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Formulas

The document outlines various mathematical properties and formulas, including properties of exponents, radicals, and logarithms, as well as patterns, theorems, and formulas related to algebra, trigonometry, probability, and geometry. It provides definitions, identities, and equations essential for solving mathematical problems. Additionally, it includes formulas for perimeter, area, and volume of different geometric shapes.

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Ella
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Formulas

The document outlines various mathematical properties and formulas, including properties of exponents, radicals, and logarithms, as well as patterns, theorems, and formulas related to algebra, trigonometry, probability, and geometry. It provides definitions, identities, and equations essential for solving mathematical problems. Additionally, it includes formulas for perimeter, area, and volume of different geometric shapes.

Uploaded by

Ella
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Reference

Properties
Properties of Exponents
Let a and b be real numbers and let m and n be rational numbers.

Zero Exponent Negative Exponent Product of Powers Property


a0 = 1, where a ≠ 0 1
a−n = —n , where a ≠ 0
a

am an = am + n

Quotient of Powers Property Power of a Power Property Power of a Product Property


am ( am )n = amn (ab)m = ambm
— = am − n, where a ≠ 0
an

Power of a Quotient Property Rational Exponents Rational Exponents


n— m
a m am, where b ≠ 0 am/n = ( a1/n )m = ( √ a) a−m/n = —
1
=—=—
1 1
()
— =—
b bm
where a ≠ 0
n — m,
am/n ( a1/n )m ( √ a)

Properties of Radicals
Let a and b be real numbers and let n be an integer greater than 1.

Product Property of Radicals Quotient Property of Radicals



n— n— n— — n—

Reference
√ab = √ a √b √a

n a
—=— n—
, where b ≠ 0
b √ b
Square Root of a Negative Number
— —
1. If r is a positive real number, then √ −r = i√r .

2. By the first property, it follows that ( i√ r )2 = −r.

Properties of Logarithms
Let b, m, and n be positive real numbers with b ≠ 1.
Product Property Quotient Property Power Property
logb mn = logb m + logb n m logb mn = n logb m
logb — = logb m − logb n
n

Other Properties
Zero-Product Property
If A and B are expressions and AB = 0, then A = 0 or B = 0.

Property of Equality for Exponential Equations


If b > 0 and b ≠ 1, then bx = b y if and only if x = y.

Property of Equality for Logarithmic Equations


If b, x, and y are positive real numbers with b ≠ 1, then logb x = logb y if and only if x = y.

Reference A97

hscc_alg2_te_reference.indd A97 4/30/15 3:02 PM


Patterns
Square of a Binomial Pattern Sum and Difference Pattern
(a + b)2 = a2 + 2ab + b2 (a + b)(a − b) = a2 − b2
(a − b)2 = a2 − 2ab + b2
Completing the Square
Cube of a Binomial
(a + b)3 = a3 + 3a2b + 3ab2 + b3
(a − b)3 = a3 − 3a2b + 3ab2 − b3
() (
b 2
x2 + bx + — = x + —
2
b
2 ) 2

Difference of Two Squares Pattern Perfect Square Trinomial Pattern


a2 − b2 = (a + b)(a − b) a2 + 2ab + b2 = (a + b)2
a2 − 2ab + b2 = (a − b)2

Sum of Two Cubes Difference of Two Cubes


a3 + b3 = (a + b)( a2 − ab + b2 ) a3 − b3 = (a − b)( a2 + ab + b2 )

Theorems
The Remainder Theorem
If a polynomial f (x) is divided by x − k, then the remainder is r = f (k).

The Factor Theorem


A polynomial f (x) has a factor x − k if and only if f (k) = 0.

The Rational Root Theorem


If f (x) = anxn + . . . + a1x + a0 has integer coefficients, then every rational solution of f (x) = 0 has the form
p factor of constant term a0
— = ——— .
q factor of leading coefficient an

The Irrational Conjugates Theorem —


Let f be a polynomial function with rational coefficients, and let a and b be rational numbers such that √b
is irrational.
— —
If a + √ b is a zero of f, then a − √ b is also a zero of f.

The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra


Theorem If f (x) is a polynomial of degree n where n > 0, then the equation f (x) = 0 has at least one solution
in the set of complex numbers.
Corollary If f (x) is a polynomial of degree n where n > 0, then the equation f (x) = 0 has exactly n solutions
provided each solution repeated twice is counted as 2 solutions, each solution repeated three times
is counted as 3 solutions, and so on.

The Complex Conjugates Theorem


If f is a polynomial function with real coefficients, and a + bi is an imaginary zero of f, then a − bi is also a
zero of f.

Descartes’s Rule of Signs


Let f (x) = anx n + an − 1x n − 1 + . . . + a2x2 + a1x + a0 be a polynomial function with real coefficients.
• The number of positive real zeros of f is equal to the number of changes in sign of the coefficients of f (x) or
is less than this by an even number.
• The number of negative real zeros of f is equal to the number of changes in the sign of the coefficients of
f (−x) or is less than this by an even number.

A98 Reference

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Formulas
Algebra
Slope Slope-intercept form Point-slope form
y2 − y1 y = mx + b y − y1 = m(x − x1)
m=—
x2 − x1

Standard form of a quadratic function Vertex form of a quadratic function


f (x) = ax2 + bx + c, where a ≠ 0 f (x) = a(x − h)2 + k, where a ≠ 0

Intercept form of a quadratic function Quadratic Formula



f (x) = a(x − p)(x − q), where a ≠ 0 −b ± √ b2 − 4ac
x = ——, where a ≠ 0
2a

Standard equation of a circle Standard form of a polynomial function


x2 + y2 = r2 f (x) = anxn + an − 1xn − 1 + . . . + a1x + a0

Exponential growth function Exponential decay function


y = abx, where a > 0 and b > 1 y = abx, where a > 0 and 0 < b < 1

Logarithm of y with base b Change-of-base formula


logb y = x if and only if bx = y logb a
logc a = — , where a, b, and c are positive real numbers
logb c
with b ≠ 1 and c ≠ 1.

Sum of n terms of 1 Sum of first n positive integers

Reference
n n
n(n + 1)
∑1=n
i=1
∑ i=—
2
i=1

Sum of squares of first n positive integers Explicit rule for an arithmetic sequence
n
n(n + 1)(2n + 1) an = a1 + (n − 1)d

i=1
i2 = ——
6

Sum of first n terms of an arithmetic series Explicit rule for a geometric sequence
( a1 + an ) an = a1rn − 1
Sn = n—
2

Sum of first n terms of a geometric series Sum of an infinite geometric series


1−
(
Sn = a1 —
1−r
rn
)
, where r ≠ 1 S=—
a1
1−r
provided ∣ r ∣ < 1

Recursive equation for an arithmetic sequence Recursive equation for a geometric sequence
an = an − 1 + d ⋅
an = r an − 1

Statistics
Sample mean Standard deviation


————
∑x
—x = — (x1 − μ)2 + (x2 − μ)2 + . . . + (xn − μ)2
n σ = ————
n

z-Score Margin of error for sample proportions


x−μ 1
z=— ±—
σ √n

Reference A99

hscc_alg2_te_reference.indd A99 4/30/15 3:02 PM


Trigonometry y

General definitions of trigonometric functions


Let θ be an angle in standard position, and let (x, y) be the point where the (x, y)
r θ
terminal side of θ intersects the circle x2 + y2 = r2. The six trigonometric functions
of θ are defined as shown. x
y x y
sin θ = — cos θ = — tan θ = —, x ≠ 0
r r x
r r x
csc θ = —, y ≠ 0 sec θ = —, x ≠ 0 cot θ = —, y ≠ 0
y x y

Conversion between degrees and radians sector y radian


180° = π radians 2π
π
π measure
2
3π 3 3 π
Arc length of a sector Area of a sector r 4 90° 4
arc 5π 120° 60° π
s = rθ A = —12 r2θ θ length 6 135° 45° 6
150° degree 30°
s
π measure 0° 0 x
180°
360° 2π
Reciprocal Identities
210° 330°
1 1 1 7π 11π
csc θ = — sec θ = — cot θ = — 225° 315°
sin θ cos θ tan θ 6

240° 300° 6
270° 7π
4 4π 5π 4
Tangent and Cotangent Identities 3 3π
3
2
sin θ cos θ
tan θ = — cot θ = —
cos θ sin θ

Pythagorean Identities Negative Angle Identities Cofunction Identites


sin2 θ + cos2 θ = 1 sin(−θ) = −sin θ
π
1 + tan2 θ = sec2 θ
1 + cot2 θ = csc2 θ
cos(−θ) = cos θ
tan(−θ) = −tan θ
(
sin — − θ = cos θ
2 )
π
(
cos — − θ = sin θ
2 )
π
(
tan — − θ = cot θ
2 )
Sum Formulas Difference Formulas
sin(a + b) = sin a cos b + cos a sin b sin(a − b) = sin a cos b − cos a sin b
cos(a + b) = cos a cos b − sin a sin b cos (a − b) = cos a cos b + sin a sin b
tan a + tan b tan a − tan b
tan(a + b) =—— tan(a − b) = ——
1 − tan a tan b 1 + tan a tan b

Probability and Combinatorics


Number of favorable outcomes Number of successes
Theoretical Probability = ——— Experimental Probability = ——
Total number of outcomes Number of trials
Probability of the complement of an event Probability of independent events

P(A) = 1 − P(A) P(A and B) = P(A) P(B) ⋅
Probability of dependent events Probability of compound events
P(A and B) = P(A) P(B | A) ⋅ P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A and B)

Permutations Combinations Binomial experiments


n! n!
nPr = — nCr = — P(k successes) = nCk pk(1 − p)n − k
(n − r)! ⋅
(n − r)! r!
The Binomial Theorem
(a + b)n = nC0anb0 + nC1an − 1b1 + nC2an − 2b2 + . . . + nCna0bn, where n is a positive integer.

A100 Reference

hscc_alg2_te_reference.indd A100 4/30/15 3:02 PM


Perimeter, Area, and Volume Formulas
Square Rectangle Triangle

a h c
s w

b
s

P = 4s P = 2 + 2w P=a+b+c
A = s2 A= w A = —12 bh

Circle Parallelogram Trapezoid


b2
r h
h
d b

b1

C = πd or C = 2πr A = bh A = —12 h( b1 + b2 )
A = π r2

Rhombus/Kite Regular n-gon

Reference
d1 d1
a

s
d2 d2

A = —12d1d2 ⋅
A = —12 aP or A = —12a ns

Prism Cylinder Pyramid


r

h h
h

B B P
P

L = Ph L = 2π rh L = —12 P
S = 2B + Ph S = 2πr2 + 2πrh S = B + —12 P
V = Bh V = πr2h
V = —13Bh

Cone Sphere
L = πr S = 4πr2
S = πr2 + πr V = —43πr3
r
h V = —13πr2h

Reference A101

hscc_alg2_te_reference.indd A101 4/30/15 3:02 PM


Other Formulas
Pythagorean Theorem Simple Interest Distance
a2 + b2 = c2 I = Prt d = rt

Compound Interest
c r nt
a
(
A=P 1+—
n )
b
Continuously Compounded Interest
A = Pert

Conversions
U.S. Customary U.S. Customary to Metric Time
1 foot = 12 inches 1 inch = 2.54 centimeters 1 minute = 60 seconds
1 yard = 3 feet 1 foot ≈ 0.3 meter 1 hour = 60 minutes
1 mile = 5280 feet 1 mile ≈ 1.61 kilometers 1 hour = 3600 seconds
1 mile = 1760 yards 1 quart ≈ 0.95 liter 1 year = 52 weeks
1 acre = 43,560 square feet 1 gallon ≈ 3.79 liters
1 cup = 8 fluid ounces 1 cup ≈ 237 milliliters Temperature
1 pint = 2 cups 1 pound ≈ 0.45 kilogram C = —59 (F − 32)
1 quart = 2 pints 1 ounce ≈ 28.3 grams
F = —95C + 32
1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 gallon ≈ 3785 cubic centimeters
1 gallon = 231 cubic inches
1 pound = 16 ounces
1 ton = 2000 pounds

Metric Metric to U.S. Customary


1 centimeter = 10 millimeters 1 centimeter ≈ 0.39 inch
1 meter = 100 centimeters 1 meter ≈ 3.28 feet
1 kilometer = 1000 meters 1 meter ≈ 39.37 inches
1 liter = 1000 milliliters 1 kilometer ≈ 0.62 mile
1 kiloliter = 1000 liters 1 liter ≈ 1.06 quarts
1 milliliter = 1 cubic centimeter 1 liter ≈ 0.26 gallon
1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters 1 kilogram ≈ 2.2 pounds
1 cubic millimeter = 0.001 milliliter 1 gram ≈ 0.035 ounce
1 gram = 1000 milligrams 1 cubic meter ≈ 264 gallons
1 kilogram = 1000 grams

A102 Reference

hscc_alg2_te_reference.indd A102 4/30/15 3:02 PM

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