Karen Morrison and Nick Hamshaw Solutions for Exercise 9: Exercise 14.9

Author:Karen Morrison & Nick Hamshaw

Karen Morrison Mathematics Solutions for Exercise - Karen Morrison and Nick Hamshaw Solutions for Exercise 9: Exercise 14.9

Attempt the practice questions from Exercise 9: Exercise 14.9 with hints and solutions to strengthen your understanding. Cambridge IGCSE® Mathematics Core and Extended Coursebook Second Edition solutions are prepared by Experienced Embibe Experts.

Questions from Karen Morrison and Nick Hamshaw Solutions for Exercise 9: Exercise 14.9 with Hints & Solutions

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

2x2-x+6=4x+5

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

7x2-3x-6=3x-7

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

x6x-3-2=0

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

0.5x2+0.8x-2=0

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

x+7x+5=9

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

Solve the given equation by using quadratic formula. Round answer to 3 significant figure where necessary. 

1x+x=7

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

A biologist claims that the average height , h meters, of trees of a certain species after t months is given by h=15t23+13t13. Find the average height of trees of this species after 64 months

HARD
Upper Secondary: IGCSE
IMPORTANT

A biologist claims that the average height , h meters, of trees of a certain species after t months is given by h=15t23+13t13. Find , to 3 significant figures , the number of months that the trees have been growing when the model would predict an average height of 10 metres.