Quelqu’un pourrait t’il m’aider s’il vous plaît ? Mary tells him his conjecture couldn't be right for any consecutive numbers. How can Dawson PROBLEME 2 Prove w
Mathématiques
mathilde19126
Question
Quelqu’un pourrait t’il m’aider s’il vous plaît ?
Mary tells him his conjecture couldn't be right for any consecutive numbers. How can Dawson
PROBLEME 2 Prove what you think!
Kevin notes that:
consecutive numbers.
52 - 42 = 5 +4 : 102 -.92 = 10 +9:
2502 – 249 = 250 + 249 and thus, he asserts that the
difference between the squares of two consecutive numbers is equal to the sum of this two
prove he's right?
Mary tells him his conjecture couldn't be right for any consecutive numbers. How can Dawson
PROBLEME 2 Prove what you think!
Kevin notes that:
consecutive numbers.
52 - 42 = 5 +4 : 102 -.92 = 10 +9:
2502 – 249 = 250 + 249 and thus, he asserts that the
difference between the squares of two consecutive numbers is equal to the sum of this two
prove he's right?
1 Réponse
-
1. Réponse ngege83
Réponse :
Explications étape par étape
Kevin notes that:
5² - 4² = 9 and 5 +4 = 9
10² -9² = 19 and 10 + 9 = 19
250² - 249² = 499 and 250 + 249 = 499
and therefore, he asserts that the difference between the squares of two consecutive numbers is equal to the sum of these two numbers.
Let's prove he's right?
Let x and x-1 be the two consecutive numbers
Difference of squares: x² - (x-1) ² = x² - (x² -2x + 1) = x² -x² + 2x -1
= 2x -1
= x + x -1
sum of these two numbers: x + (x-1)
and so Kevin is right:
The difference between the squares of two consecutive numbers is equal to the sum of these two numbers.