Category: Grade 10

Week 14 in Pre Cal 11 – rational equations

This week in Pre Calc we did our final review on rational expressions and equations as we have our unit test on Wednesday. the mistake I wanted to look over this week was on the skills check we did on Thursday.

At first, when doing this question I made a mistake when factoring. It’s important to look over your work cause a simple mistake while factoring can mess up your entire answer. I factored using -8 and 3 instead of -9 and 4. Factoring an expression like this is nothing new and something I’m capable of doing but I made a simple error by just guessing and not checking to make sure those numbers fit the expression and that completely changed my answer. In the end, I caught my mistake and redid the question. Another thing is I forgot to do my non-permissible values. It’s smarter to do these before solving the expression as these values relate to the beginning values.

This is how I ended up solving it. Since it’s a division question I factored everything and then used the reciprocal of the second expression and multiplied everything. This question isn’t difficult but a simple thing like factoring can really change your answer which is why it’s important to not rush and look over your work.

Astronomy wonder project – Wormholes

Wonder Project | Wormholes 

What are wormholes? How could their existence change spacetime as we know it? How could it affect space travel? Does it only work on paper, or could the theories be real? How do they connect black and white holes?

These are all questions I had while researching my initial Wonder question “What are wormholes, and how could their existence affect Earth and space?”.  

To start, what is a wormhole? There are many possible answers as wormholes are highly theoretical but the best way to explain one is if you imagine the universe like a folded piece of paper. If bent in the right way, it could create a wormhole. Going through a wormhole would be like walking through a door except it could take you to another side of the universe.  

This is essentially what it would look like from each side 

Wormholes existing could revolutionize space travel for humans and allow us to travel possibly faster than the speed of light. Einstein’s theory of relativity proves mathematically that wormholes could exist, but we have yet to find one. Math, although helpful, does not describe reality. 

 

While researching Wormholes I was able to find three main theories.  

  • Einstein’s Rosen Bridges 
  • String theory 
  • Manmade Wormholes using Exotic Matter 

Einstein’s Rosen Bridge Theory 

First is Einstein’s Rosen Bridge theory. After Einstein published his theory of relativity, it says that gravity defines how objects will attract each other and affect space and time around them. This backs up wormholes in a sense and led to the mathematical equations that created the Rosen bridge theory.  

Imagine a black hole, as we know black holes attract and pull objects towards them. Because of different equations,  it showed that this black hole might not be by itself and that it could have another side A.K.A a white hole. While the black hole inhales everything the white hole expels everything. The white hole would essentially be in a parallel universe where time moves backwards. 

 

Although this theory could be real, it would not be a traversable wormhole. It would take an infinite amount of time to reach the other side which would result in your death before you reach the end.

String theory  

This theory, unlike the last, opens the possibility for traversable wormholes. The string theory gets very complicated but essentially after the Big Bang quantum fluctuations (which are smaller than an atom. Their size is 10^-35m) may have created a vast number of traversable wormholes. Threaded through these wormholes are cosmic strings which keep the wormholes open and theoretically traversable for humans. If these wormholes exist because of the Big Bang, they could be spread out all over the universe and we just need to discover one.  

(A video in case you’re curious about string theory) 

Manmade Theory  

The final theory I found about wormholes was a manmade Wormhole. In theory and with the right resources we could create our own wormhole. This wormhole can’t contain an event horizon if we want it to be traversable both ways, it’s mass must be just right so gravity doesn’t kill humans and the biggest problem we need to figure out is keeping it open.  

      

Because of gravity, if we were to create a wormhole it would shut almost immediately. We would need a matter with more power than the center of a neutron star to keep it open. This is where exotic matter comes in. Unlike positive and negative matter which attract because of positive mass, exotic matter repels due to having negative mass. With enough exotic matter, it would be powerful enough to repel gravity and keep the wormhole open.  

Now even with all these theories and solutions, Wormholes present quite a few issues. The existence of wormholes could create time travel paradoxes and would pretty much break spacetime. They essentially violate the structure of the universe. Because of this Wormholes currently exist only through paper equations and our minds. 

Their existence could revolutionize life as we know it, we could travel the universe easily and change physics as we know it but currently, that isn’t a possibility.   

This video goes more into depth about the theories and wormhole explanation 

 

Resources!!

Tillman, N. T., Harvey, A., & Sohn, R. (2024, March 5). What are wormholes? Space.com. https://www.space.com/20881-wormholes.html#:~:text=Einstein%27s%20theory%20of%20general%20relativity%20mathematically%20predicts%20the,the%20mouth%20of%20each%20is%20a%20black%20hole.

The Einstein-Rosen Bridge. (2015, January 11). https://i4is.org/einstein-rosen-bridge/

PhysLink.com, Anton Skorucak. (n.d.). How can something have a negative mass, and what does that mean? https://www.physlink.com/Education/Askexperts/ae257.cfm

Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. (2018, August 12). Wormholes explained – breaking Spacetime [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9P6rdqiybaw

Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. (2018a, March 1). String Theory Explained – What is The True Nature of Reality? [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Da-2h2B4faU

Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. (2024, January 30). Did the future already happen? – The paradox of time [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwSzpaTHyS8

 

week 11 in math ten

this week in math ten we learned about domain and range. I’d never done anything with domain and range before so I was a little confused at first but after watching some videos on Khan Academy I figured it out.

domain represents the x-axis and range represents the y-axis. domain is all the x values on a graph and range is all the y values. to find the domain and range you can look at a graph or make an equation

an example of one of these equations could be 2<x<8

with that equation, you would get a vertical line starting at 2 and ending with another vertical line that ends at 8

given a function f(x), the values that f(x) can take on constitute the range of the function, while all the possible x values constitute the domain

week 13 in math ten

This week in math ten we learned about slope. I think I had been briefly introduced to this last year but we never went into a lot of detail about it. First slope is represented by the letter M not S and the main way to calculate it by using a graph is by using the formula rise/run. Rise and Run is used to look at how much the slope is going up by on the vertical axis and how much it changes on the horizontal axis. when you connect these dots they should make a diagonal line and if they don’t there are some other options like if there in a straight horizontal line than that means the Y value is equal to zero and if it’s in a straight line on the vertical axis it’s undefined. If the rise goes down it’s negative and if it goes up positive.  if the run goes to the left it’s negative and to the right positive.

You can always figure out the slope of a line if you have 2 points. If you are not given 2 points, you can find 2 points on the graph and use them to find the slope.

Here are some good things to know:
– m = slope
– (x₁, y₁) = point 1
– (x₂, y₂) = point 2
– rise = the difference in the y-values (y₂ – y₁)
– run= the difference in the x-values (x₂ – x₁)

 

x₁ = 4 and x₂ = 6
y₁ = 2 and y₂ = 1

Now we just need to plug these values into the slope formula:

m = rise / run
= (y₂ – y₁) / (x₂ – x₁)
= (1 – 2) / (6 – 4)
= (-1) / 2
= -1/2

So the slope (m) is -1/2.

 

Week 10 in math ten

this week in math ten I learned more on the topic of linear relations. linear inequalities and equations we’re a big part of math 9 but I did struggle with them a bit. This week we learned about linear patterns and how to plug in a certain number to get the answer for any pattern. you do this by using the x and y axis. I like using a t chart because it’s the most visual and straight forward way to figure out your equations. lets say you have a linear relation that starts at seven and goes up by seven. Your t chart will look something like this

__x__|__y__

1     |     7

2     |     14

3     |     21

now to find the patter we should first identify how much the number is increasing or decreasing by. after that we use x or whatever variable to make the equation

7x = y

this equation is easy because seven times 1 is equal to y 7 and seven times 2 is equal to 14 and so on and so on but sometimes you will need to add or subtract numbers to get the answer you need. you basically just need to find the number that will give you the correct answer every time and you’ll have to go through trial and error to get this answer sometimes.

week 9 in math ten

this week I’ve been reviewing the past three units quite a bit because the midterm is coming up. two things i have reviewed quite a bit is negative exponents because that so far has been my worst unit and trig word problems. i think that trigonometry was my best unit but i still struggled quite a bit with it and I’ve been using the work book and Khan academy to try and improve my skills. I’ve done quite a bit of negative exponent review as well because that was something that confused me quite a bit but i think I’ve got a much better understanding of it now and i feel pretty prepared for the midterm.

week 8 in math ten

This week in math ten i learned some new strategies about factoring polynomials. Mrs Burton taught us the 123 strategy and i found it to be very useful when trying to figure out how to factor different polynomial equations. 1 stands for one thing in common, 2 stands for how many terms and 3 stands for x^2 x and #. I found this strategy of identifying what kind of factoring it is very useful because it can be hard to identify the different kind of factors that your dealing with and how to go about solving the question. anyway i used this a lot while studying for the  upcoming test and i believe it will help me  quite a bit during that.

 

18^2 + 12x + 6

they all have 3 in common as the gcf

3(6x^2 + 4x + 2)

two is a prime number so you don’t have to do anymore

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