STEP2 2020 -- Pure Mathematics
STEP2 2020 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)
Section titled “STEP2 2020 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)”Exam: STEP2 | Year: 2020 | Questions: Q1—Q8 | Total marks per question: 20
All questions are pure mathematics. Solutions and examiner commentary are included below.
Overview
Section titled “Overview”| Q | Topic | Difficulty | Key Techniques |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 微积分 (Calculus) | Challenging | 积分代换, 反常积分判敛, 代数化简, 部分分式 |
| 2 | 微分方程 (Differential Equations) | Challenging | 分离变量法, 隐函数方程, 曲线绘制, 对称性分析 |
| 3 | 数列与级数 (Sequences & Series) | Hard | 数学归纳法, 递推关系求解, 不等式证明, 单峰性分析, 代数化简 |
| 4 | 几何与向量 (Geometry & Vectors) | Challenging | 三角不等式, 反证法, 函数单调性, 分情况讨论, 比例不等式 |
| 5 | 数论 (Number Theory) | Challenging | 同余运算, 数字和性质, 不等式放缩, 穷举验证, 数位分析 |
| 6 | 矩阵与线性代数 (Matrices & Linear Algebra) | Challenging | 矩阵迹的性质, 行列式计算, 特征多项式, 充要条件证明, 矩阵构造 |
| 7 | 复数 (Complex Numbers) | Challenging | 复数模运算, Möbius变换, 直线到圆映射, 参数化分析, 区域判断 |
| 8 | 微积分 (Calculus) | Hard | 多项式因式分解, 定积分计算, 面积相等条件, 对称性分析, 拐点判定 |
Question 1
Section titled “Question 1”Topic: 微积分 (Calculus) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”1 (i) Use the substitution , where , to find in terms of the integral
(ii) Find in terms of the integral
(iii) Show that
Hint
Only penalise missing +c once in parts (i) and (ii)
1(i)
Must include attempt at (or )
1(ii) Let
Then
Let
1(iii) Let
Allow substitution leading to two algebraic factors in the denominator.
If done through a sequence of substitutions:
a further substitution leading to a square root of a quadratic as the denominator.
= ![]() |
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= ![]() |
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= ![]() |
Model Solution
Part (i)
Let , so that and .
Differentiating: , so .
We express the integrand in terms of :
So
Therefore the integral becomes
Substituting back :
Part (ii)
First substitute , so and :
Now let (motivated by the substitution from part (i)), so that and .
Then , so .
We compute each factor:
So
The integral becomes
Substituting back :
Part (iii)
We evaluate .
Let , so . Then .
When : . When : .
We express each factor in the denominator:
So
The full denominator is
Therefore
Now expand the expression under the square root and complete the square:
So the integral becomes
Substituting , : when , ; when , .
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:代换后积分限的变化处理、被积函数化简时的符号错误、反常积分收敛性的验证。第(iii)部分需要从前两部分的结果巧妙组合。
Question 2
Section titled “Question 2”Topic: 微分方程 (Differential Equations) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”2 The curves and both satisfy the differential equation
where .
All points on have positive and co-ordinates and passes through . All points on have negative and co-ordinates and passes through .
(i) Show that the equation of can be written as .
Determine a similar result for curve .
Hence show that is a line of symmetry of each curve.
(ii) Sketch on the same axes the curves and , for . Hence show that lies between the lines and .
Sketch curve .
(iii) Sketch curve .
Hint
| 2(i) | $\frac{1 - ky}{y} \frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{kx - 1}{x}$ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $\ln | y | - ky = kx - \ln | x | + c$ | |
| Hence, $\ln | xy | = k(x + y) + c$ |
| $xy = \frac{1}{4} \left[ (x + y)^2 - (x - y)^2 \right] = Ae^{k(x+y)}$ |
|---|
| $C_1$ is $(x - y)^2 = (x + y)^2 - 2^{x+y}$ | |
|---|---|
| $C_2$ is $(x - y)^2 = (x + y)^2 - 2^{x+y+4}$ |
| In both cases, the equation is invariant under $(x, y) \mapsto (y, x)$, so symmetrical in $y = x$. | |
|---|---|
| 2(ii) | ![]() |
| **Graphs**: Correct shapes of curves | |
| **Graphs**: Intersections at (2,4) and (4,16) | |
| $(x - y)^2 \geq 0$, so $(x + y)^2 > 2^{x+y}$ | |
| Therefore, $(x + y)$ must lie between 2 and 4 | |
![]() |
|
| **Graph**: Symmetry about $y = x$ | |
| **Graph**: Closed curve lying between $x + y = 3 \pm 1$ | |
| **Graph**: Passes through (1,1) and (2,2) |
| 2(iii) | Sketches of $y = x^2$ and $y = 2^{x+4}$ $x^2 > 2^{x+4}$ only when $x < -2$. |
![]() |
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| Graph: Symmetry about $y = x$ | |
| Graph: Passes through (-1,-1) | |
| Graph: $y \to 0$ as $x \to \infty$, $y \to -\infty$ as $x \to 0$ |
Model Solution
Part (i)
The differential equation is
Separating variables:
Integrating both sides:
Rearranging:
So . Writing :
Curve (positive ): Here , so .
Substituting : , so . Hence
Using the identity :
This is the equation of .
Curve (negative ): Here , so again , giving .
Substituting : , so . Hence
This is the equation of .
Symmetry: In both cases the equation involves only and , both of which are invariant under the swap . Therefore is a line of symmetry for each curve.
Part (ii)
The curves and (for ) intersect at (both equal 4) and (both equal 16). For , we have , and outside this interval .
For any point on , we have , so from the equation of :
Setting , this requires , which holds if and only if . Therefore
so lies between the lines and .
Sketch of : The curve is a closed oval, symmetric about , lying entirely in the first quadrant between the two parallel lines and . It passes through (where ) and (where ). At the curve is tangent to , and at it is tangent to .
Part (iii)
For with , the condition gives
Setting , we need . At : . For : grows while shrinks, so the inequality holds. For : , so the inequality fails. Therefore .
From : as , , so . By symmetry, as , .
Sketch of : The curve is an open curve in the third quadrant, symmetric about , with . It passes through where it touches the boundary line . As , (and vice versa by symmetry). The curve has both axes as asymptotes.
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:分离变量时的代数处理、C1(正坐标)与C2(负坐标)的区别处理、图像绘制时边界线x+y=2和x+y=4的推导。
Question 3
Section titled “Question 3”Topic: 数列与级数 (Sequences & Series) | Difficulty: Hard | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”3 A sequence of positive real numbers is said to be unimodal if there is a value such that
and
So the sequences 1, 2, 3, 2, 1; 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; 1, 1, 3, 3, 2 and 2, 2, 2, 2, 2 are all unimodal, but 1, 2, 1, 3, 1 is not.
A sequence of positive real numbers is said to have property if for all with .
(i) Show that, in any sequence of positive real numbers with property ,
Prove that any sequence of positive real numbers with property is unimodal.
(ii) A sequence of real numbers satisfies for , where is a positive real constant. Prove that, for ,
and, for ,
Hence show that the sequence consists of positive terms and is unimodal, provided .
In the case and , prove by induction that .
Let , where is an integer with .
In the case and , prove that is largest when .
Hint
| 3(i) | Suppose, $\exists k: 2 \le k \le n - 1$ such that $u_{k-1} \ge u_k$, but $u_k < u_{k+1}$ |
| Since all of the terms are positive, these imply that $u_k^2 < u_{k-1}u_{k+1}$, so the sequence does not have property L. | |
| Therefore, if the sequence has property L, once a value $k$ has been reached such that $u_{k-1} \ge u_k$, it must be the case that all subsequent terms also have that property (which is the given definition of unimodality). | |
| 3(ii) | $u_r - \alpha u_{r-1} = \alpha(u_{r-1} - \alpha u_{r-2})$, so $u_r - \alpha u_{r-1} = \alpha^{r-2}(u_2 - \alpha u_1)$ |
| $u_r^2 - u_{r-1}u_{r+1} = u_r^2 - u_{r-1}(2\alpha u_r - \alpha^2 u_{r-1}) = (u_r - \alpha u_{r-1})^2$ for $r \ge 2$ | |
| The first identity shows that $u_r > 0$ for all $r$ if $u_2 > \alpha u_1 > 0$. | |
| Since the right hand side of the second identity is always non-negative, the sequence has property L, and is hence unimodal. | |
| 3(iii) | $u_1 = (2 - 1)\alpha^{1-1} + 2(1 - 1)\alpha^{1-2} = 1$, which is correct. $u_2 = (2 - 2)\alpha^{2-1} + 2(2 - 1)\alpha^{2-2} = 2$, which is correct. |
| Suppose that: $u_{k-2} = (4 - k)\alpha^{k-3} + 2(k - 3)\alpha^{k-4}$, and $u_{k-1} = (3 - k)\alpha^{k-2} + 2(k - 2)\alpha^{k-3}$. |
|
| $u_k = 2\alpha\left((3 - k)\alpha^{k-2} + 2(k - 2)\alpha^{k-3}\right) - \alpha^2((4 - k)\alpha^{k-3} + 2(k - 3)\alpha^{k-4})$ $= \alpha^{k-1}(6 - 2k - 4 + k) + \alpha^{k-2}(4k - 8 - 2k + 6)$ $= \alpha^{k-1}(2 - k) + 2\alpha^{k-2}(k - 1)$ which is the correct expression for $u_k$ |
|
| Hence, by induction $u_r = (2 - r)\alpha^{r-1} + 2(r - 1)\alpha^{r-2}$ | |
| $u_r - u_{r+1} = \left((2 - r)\alpha^{r-1} + 2(r - 1)\alpha^{r-2}\right) - \left((1 - r)\alpha^r + 2r\alpha^{r-1}\right)$ | |
| $= \alpha^{r-2}\left(2(r - 1) + (2 - 3r)\alpha + (r - 1)\alpha^2\right)$ | |
| $= \frac{\alpha^{r-2}}{N^2}\left(2N^2(r - 1) + (2 - 3r)N(N - 1) + (r - 1)(N - 1)^2\right)$ | |
| $= \frac{\alpha^{r-2}}{N^2}\left((r - 1) + rN - N^2\right)$ | |
| when $r = N$, $u_N - u_{N+1} = \frac{\alpha^{r-2}(N - 1)}{N^2} > 0$ | |
| when $r = N - 1$, $u_{N-1} - u_N = \frac{-2\alpha^{r-2}}{N^2} < 0$ | |
| so $u_r$ is largest when $r = N$ |
Model Solution
Part (i)
We are given that a sequence of positive real numbers has property : for all .
We want to show .
Suppose . From property :
Since , we can divide both sides:
Since , we have , so:
Therefore , as required.
Now we prove any sequence with property is unimodal. Consider two cases:
Case 1: (the sequence is non-decreasing). Then satisfies the definition.
Case 2: The sequence is not non-decreasing. Then there exists a smallest index such that is false, i.e., . By the minimality of , we have .
By the result above, , and applying this repeatedly gives .
Therefore the sequence is unimodal.
Part (ii)
First identity. Define for . From the recurrence :
So is a geometric sequence with common ratio and first term . Therefore:
Second identity. For , using :
Positivity and unimodality. Since , we have , so from the first identity:
Since and , by induction every .
The second identity gives , so property holds. By part (i), the sequence is unimodal.
Induction proof. We prove for .
Base cases:
- : . Check.
- : . Check.
Inductive step: Assume the formula holds for and (where ). Then:
This is exactly the formula for . By induction, the result holds for all .
Maximum at . Let . We compute :
Substituting , i.e., :
Expanding the bracket:
Let me redo this more carefully. Grouping by powers of and :
Coefficient of :
Constant terms:
Wait, let me recompute. Constant (no ): . Hmm, that gives .
Checking: ? Let me just evaluate directly.
When :
So , meaning .
When :
So , meaning .
Together: , and since the sequence is unimodal (proved above), is largest when .
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:归纳法基础步骤的正确设置、递推关系的代数化简(u_r-αu_{r-1}的公式)、极值位置r=N的精确判断。此题逻辑链长、综合性极强。
Question 4
Section titled “Question 4”Topic: 几何与向量 (Geometry & Vectors) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”4 (i) Given that and are the lengths of the sides of a triangle, explain why , and .
(ii) Use a diagram to show that the converse of the result in part (i) also holds: if and are positive numbers such that and then it is possible to construct a triangle with sides of length and .
(iii) When and are the lengths of the sides of a triangle, determine in each case whether the following sets of three lengths can
- always
- sometimes but not always
- never
form the sides of a triangle. Prove your claims.
(A) .
(B) .
(C) .
(D) .
(iv) Let f be a function defined on the positive real numbers and such that, whenever ,
Show that, whenever and are the lengths of the sides of a triangle, then and can also be the lengths of the sides of a triangle.
Hint
| 4(i) | The straight line distance between two points must be less than the length of any other rectilinear path between the points. |
| 4(ii) | ![]() |
| Diagram showing two circles and straight line joining their centres. Length of line and radii of circles are $a$, $b$ and $c$ in some order. |
|
| Either statement that the straight line is the longest of the lengths, or explanation that one circle cannot be contained inside the other. | |
| Explanation that the circles must meet. | |
| 4(iii) | (A) If $a + b > c$ then $(a + 1) + (b + 1) > c + 2 > c + 1$ et cycl., so $a + 1$, $b + 1$, $c + 1$ can always form the sides of a triangle. |
| (B) If $a = b = c = 1$ we have $1, 1, 1$ which can form the sides of a triangle. |
|
| If $a = 1, b = c = 2$ we have $\frac{1}{2}, 1, 2$ which cannot form the sides of a triangle. | |
| Therefore, $\frac{a}{b}, \frac{b}{c}, \frac{c}{a}$ can sometimes, but not always form the sides of a triangle. | |
| (C) If $p \ge q \ge r$ then $|p - q| + |q - r| = p - q + q - r = p - r = |p - r|$ |
|
| So two of $|p - q|, |q - r|, |p - r|$ will always sum to the third, so they never form the sides of a triangle. | |
| (D) If $a + b > c$ then $a^2 + bc + b^2 + ca = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab + c(a + b) + 2ab$ |
|
| $= (a - b)^2 + c(a + b) + 2ab > c^2 + ab$ et cycl. so $a^2 + bc, b^2 + ca, c^2 + ab$ can always form the sides of a triangle. |
|
| 4(iv) | Since $a + b > a$ and $b$, $\frac{f(a)}{a} > \frac{f(a+b)}{a+b}$ and $\frac{f(b)}{b} > \frac{f(a+b)}{a+b}$ |
| Since $c < a + b, f(c) < f(a + b)$ | |
| Thus $f(a) + f(b) > \frac{af(a)}{a+b} + \frac{bf(b)}{a+b} = f(a + b) > f(c)$ et cycl. So $f(a), f(b)$ and $f(c)$ can form the sides of a triangle. |
Model Solution
Part (i)
If are the side lengths of a triangle, then the triangle inequality states that the length of any one side is strictly less than the sum of the other two. Geometrically, the straight-line distance between two vertices is shorter than any path that goes through the third vertex (since a straight line is the shortest path between two points). Therefore , , and .
Part (ii)
Suppose satisfy , , and .
Without loss of generality, assume is the largest of the three values. Then ensures that the longest length is strictly less than the sum of the other two.
Draw a line segment of length . With centre , draw a circle of radius . With centre , draw a circle of radius .
Since , neither circle is contained inside the other: circle extends to distance from , and circle extends to distance from ; since , each circle reaches past the centre of the other.
Since (which follows from , true because and the triangle inequalities hold), the circles are not disjoint.
Therefore the two circles must intersect. Let be a point of intersection. Then and , so triangle has side lengths , , .
Part (iii)
(A) : Always form a triangle.
We need to show (and cyclically). Since :
The cyclic inequalities follow identically. Therefore , , always form a triangle.
(B) : Sometimes but not always form a triangle.
Example where they do: . Then , and . They form an equilateral triangle.
Example where they do not: . The three values are . Then , so the triangle inequality fails.
Therefore can sometimes, but not always, form the sides of a triangle.
(C) : Never form a triangle.
Let , , and let be the remaining value, so .
Then the three lengths are:
Now:
So two of the three lengths sum to exactly the third. The triangle inequality requires strict inequality, so these three lengths can never form a triangle.
(D) : Always form a triangle.
We must show (and cyclically).
Since and :
By the same argument applied cyclically (with permuted), all three triangle inequalities hold. Therefore always form a triangle.
Part (iv)
We are given that is defined on positive reals, and whenever :
- (so is strictly increasing and positive), and
- (so is strictly decreasing).
Let be the side lengths of a triangle, so (and cyclically). We want to show .
Since and , the decreasing property of gives:
Multiplying:
Adding:
Since and is strictly increasing:
Therefore .
By the same argument applied cyclically to the other two triangle inequalities, we obtain and . Therefore can form the sides of a triangle.
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:(B)部分a/b, b/c, c/a的判定需要巧妙构造、(C)部分|a-b|,|b-c|,|c-a|通常不能构成三角形的证明、(iv)中函数性质的正确运用。
Question 5
Section titled “Question 5”Topic: 数论 (Number Theory) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”5 If is a positive integer, the value of the function is the sum of the digits of in base 10. For example, .
An -digit positive integer is written in the form , where for all and .
(i) Prove that is non-negative and divisible by 9.
(ii) Prove that is a multiple of 9 if and only if is a multiple of 9.
Suppose that . Show that if has digits, then and , and hence that .
Find a value of for which . Show that there are no further values of satisfying this equation.
(iii) Find a value of for which . Show that there are no further values of satisfying this equation.
Hint
| 5(i) | $x - q(x) = \sum_{r=0}^{n-1} a_r \times 10^r - \sum_{r=0}^{n-1} a_r = \sum_{r=0}^{n-1} a_r \times (10^r - 1)$ |
| $10^r \ge 1 \quad \forall r$, so $x - q(x)$ is non-negative | |
| $9 | (10^r - 1) \quad \forall r$ | |
| 5(ii) | $x - 44q(x) = 44(x - q(x)) - 43x$ |
| So it is a multiple of 9 iff $43x$ is. | |
| $(43, 9) = 1$, so $x - 44q(x)$ is a multiple of 9 iff $x$ is | |
| If $x$ has $n$ digits, $q(x) \le 9n$ | |
| Since $x = 44q(x)$, $x \le 396n$. Any $n$ digit number must be at least $10^{n-1}$. |
|
| These inequalities cannot be simultaneously true for $n \ge 5$ ($396 \times 5 < 10^4$). Therefore $n \le 4$. |
|
| Since $x - 44q(x) = 0$, which is a multiple of 9, $x$ is a multiple of 9. | |
| $q(x)$ is an integer and $x = 44q(x)$, so $x$ is a multiple of 44. Since $(9, 44) = 1$, $x$ must be a multiple of $44 \times 9 = 396$. |
|
| So $x = 396k$ and therefore (by the result above) $k \le 4$. | |
| Checking: Only $k = 2$ works. | |
| 5(iii) | $x - 107q(q(x)) = 0 = 107(x - q(x)) + 107(q(x) - q(q(x))) - 106x$ |
| $(x - q(x))$ and $(q(x) - q(q(x)))$ are both divisible by 9 (by part (i)) and so $x$ is divisible by 9 |
|
| $x = 107q(q(x))$ and so is divisible by 107, and so is divisible by 963. So $x = 963k$ for some $k$. |
|
| If $x$ has $n$ digits, then $q(x) \le 9n$. By (i), $q(q(x)) \le q(x) \le 9n$. So $x \le 963n$ and $x \ge 10^{n-1}$ which implies that $n \le 4$ and so $k \le 4$ |
|
| Checking: Only $k = 1$ works. |
Model Solution
Part (i)
Write where for all and . Then .
Since for all , and , every term in the sum is non-negative, so .
Also, is divisible by 9 for every . Therefore for each , and so .
Part (ii)
We write:
Hmm, a cleaner decomposition. Alternatively:
Wait, let us use the hint’s approach:
From part (i), , so . Therefore:
Since , we have . Therefore is a multiple of 9 if and only if is a multiple of 9.
Now suppose .
Upper bound. If has digits, then (since each digit is at most 9), so:
Lower bound. Any -digit positive integer satisfies .
Combining: . Checking:
- : . Holds.
- : . Fails.
For , grows much faster than , so the inequality fails for all . Hence .
Finding . Since , and , we know from the result above. Also means . Since , we get . So for some positive integer , and since , we have .
Checking each:
| Match? | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 396 | 18 | 792 | No |
| 2 | 792 | 18 | 792 | Yes |
| 3 | 1188 | 18 | 792 | No |
| 4 | 1584 | 18 | 792 | No |
The only solution is .
We have shown , and among the multiples of 396 in the range , only satisfies the equation. Therefore there are no further solutions.
Part (iii)
Claim: satisfies .
Check: , then , and .
Uniqueness. Suppose . We show must be 963.
First, , so:
From part (i), and (applying part (i) with in place of ). Therefore . Since (as ), we get .
Since , we also have . Since (107 is prime and not 3), we get .
Bounding the number of digits. If has digits, then , and applying part (i) to : . So:
Also . Since , the inequality fails for , so . This gives , and since , the candidates are with .
| Match? | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 963 | 18 | 9 | 963 | Yes |
| 2 | 1926 | 18 | 9 | 963 | No |
| 3 | 2889 | 27 | 9 | 963 | No |
| 4 | 3852 | 18 | 9 | 963 | No |
The only solution is .
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:数字和上界的估计(x≤396n的推导)、n的范围缩小到n≤4、穷举时遗漏解或重复计算。
Question 6
Section titled “Question 6”Topic: 矩阵与线性代数 (Matrices & Linear Algebra) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”6 A matrix is real if it can be written as , where and are real. In this case, the trace of matrix is defined to be and is the determinant of matrix . In this question, is a real matrix.
(i) Prove that
(ii) Prove that and that
(iii) Use part (ii) to prove that
Find a necessary and sufficient condition on and so that .
(iv) Give an example of a matrix for which , but which does not represent a rotation or reflection. [Note that the matrices are both rotations.]
Hint
6(i) Let $\mathbf{M} = \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}$; then $\mathbf{M}^2 = \begin{pmatrix} a^2 + bc & b(a + d) \\ c(a + d) & d^2 + bc \end{pmatrix}$ so $\text{Tr}(\mathbf{M}^2) = a^2 + d^2 + 2bc = (a + d)^2 - 2(ad - bc)$ 6(ii) Let $\mathbf{M} = \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}$; then $\mathbf{M}^2 = \begin{pmatrix} a\tau - \delta & b\tau \\ c\tau & d\tau - \delta \end{pmatrix}$, where $\tau = \text{Tr}(\mathbf{M})$ and $\delta = \text{Det}(\mathbf{M})$. Thus $\mathbf{M}^2 = \pm\mathbf{I} \Leftrightarrow \tau = 0$ and $\delta = \mp 1$or $b = c = 0$ and $a^2 = d^2 = \pm 1$ If $b = c = 0$ and $a = d = \pm 1$, then $\mathbf{M} = \pm\mathbf{I}$ If $b = c = 0$ and $a = -d = \pm 1$, then $\tau = 0$ and $\delta = -1$ Thus $\mathbf{M}^2 = +\mathbf{I} \Leftrightarrow \tau = 0$ and $\delta = -1$. Thus $\mathbf{M}^2 = -\mathbf{I} \Leftrightarrow \tau = 0$ and $\delta = +1$. 6(iii) Part (ii) implies $\text{Det}(\mathbf{M}^2) = -1$, if $\mathbf{M}^4 = \mathbf{I}$, but $\mathbf{M}^2 \neq \pm\mathbf{I}$. However, $\text{Det}(\mathbf{M}^2) = \text{Det}(\mathbf{M})^2$, so this is impossible. Clearly $\mathbf{M}^2 = \pm\mathbf{I} \Rightarrow \mathbf{M}^4 = \mathbf{I}$ Part (ii) implies that $\mathbf{M}^4 = -\mathbf{I} \Leftrightarrow \text{Tr}(\mathbf{M}^2) = 0$ and $\text{Det}(\mathbf{M}^2) = 1$ so from (i) $\Leftrightarrow \text{Tr}(\mathbf{M})^2 = 2\text{Det}(\mathbf{M})$ and $\text{Det}(\mathbf{M}) = \pm 1$ so $\Leftrightarrow \text{Tr}(\mathbf{M}) = \pm\sqrt{2}$
and $\text{Det}(\mathbf{M}) = 1$. Any example, for instance a matrix satisfying the conditions for any of $\mathbf{M}^2 = \mathbf{I}$, $\mathbf{M}^2 = -\mathbf{I}$, $\mathbf{M}^4 = -\mathbf{I}$, which is not a rotation or reflection.
Model Solution
Part (i)
Let . Then:
So:
Now:
Therefore .
Part (ii)
Every matrix satisfies its own characteristic equation (Cayley—Hamilton):
First statement: but and .
() Suppose and . From Cayley—Hamilton:
If , then for some scalar . Then forces , giving , contradicting our assumption.
Therefore . Substituting into the trace identity from part (i):
() Suppose and . From Cayley—Hamilton:
We verify : if , then , a contradiction.
Second statement: and .
() Suppose . From Cayley—Hamilton:
If , then and requires , which has no real solution. Contradiction.
Therefore . Then:
() Suppose and . From Cayley—Hamilton:
Part (iii)
Claim: .
() If , then . If , then .
() Suppose , so . Applying part (ii) to the matrix : either (which means , and we are done), or and .
But for any real matrix . So is impossible.
Therefore .
Condition for .
By part (ii) applied to :
From part (i): .
Also: .
So the conditions are:
From : .
If : , which has no real solution.
If : , so .
Therefore:
Part (iv)
We need a real matrix with that is neither a rotation nor a reflection.
Take:
Verification that : We have and . By part (ii), , so .
Verification that is not a rotation: A rotation matrix has determinant . Since , is not a rotation.
Verification that is not a reflection: A reflection about a line through the origin is a symmetric matrix (it has the form ). Since is not symmetric (), is not a reflection.
Therefore is a valid example.
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:M²=-I的充分性证明需考虑复特征值、M⁴=-I的条件推导涉及二次方程判别式、构造反例时矩阵元素的选取需验证M⁸=I。
Question 7
Section titled “Question 7”Topic: 复数 (Complex Numbers) | Difficulty: Challenging | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”7 In this question, .
(i) Let be the complex number , where . Show that is independent of . Hence show that, if is a complex number on the line in the Argand diagram, then lies on a circle in the Argand diagram with centre 1.
Let be the line , where is a real constant not equal to 2. Show that, if lies on , then lies on a circle whose centre and radius you should give in terms of . For which on is ?
(ii) Let be the line , where is a non-zero real constant. Show that, if lies on , then lies on a circle whose centre and radius you should give in terms of . For which on is ?
Hint
7(i) , which is independent of .
Points on the line have the form and the points satisfying lie on a circle with centre 1.
If , then
which is independent of when
which is when .
Thus the circle has centre at and radius .
,
so when ; that is, for those on with negative imaginary part.
7(ii) If then
which is independent of when
which is when
so the circle has centre A1 and radius A1.
,
so when ; that is, for those on with real part greater than 2.
Model Solution
Part (i)
Let where . Then
We compute :
Taking the modulus:
This is independent of , as required.
Since parametrises all points on the line as ranges over , and for every such , the image of this line under is the circle with centre and radius in the Argand diagram.
General line : , .
Let with . Then
So
We seek a real constant such that is independent of . We have
Writing this over a common denominator:
Expanding the numerator, the coefficient of is and the coefficient of is . For this to equal some constant times , we need the numerator to have the form . Matching the coefficient: . Matching the constant term: .
Taking the positive square root (for the numerator to factor correctly): , giving , so .
With , we verify: , and . Indeed .
The numerator simplifies to
Therefore
The image of the line is the circle with centre and radius .
Which on give ?
From above, , which is positive if and only if . So for those points on with .
Part (ii)
Let with and . Then
So
We seek a real constant such that is independent of . We have
Expanding the second term in the numerator: . For the numerator to be a constant multiple of , we need the cross-term to produce when combined with the term.
Setting : then , so
Therefore
The image of the line is the circle with centre and radius .
Which on give ?
From above, , which is positive if and only if . So for those points on with .
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:复数模的计算(需有理化分母)、圆心半径公式的推导、p=2时映射退化的处理、映射区域的正确判断。
Question 8
Section titled “Question 8”Topic: 微积分 (Calculus) | Difficulty: Hard | Marks: 20
Problem
Section titled “Problem”8 In this question, is a quartic polynomial where the coefficient of is equal to 1, and which has four real roots, 0, , and , where .
is defined by .
The area enclosed by the curve and the -axis between 0 and is equal to that between and , and half that between and .
(i) Sketch the curve , showing the co-ordinates of its turning points.
Explain why must have the form , where .
Find, in factorised form, an expression for in terms of , and .
(ii) If , explain why and why if . Hence show that or .
By considering also , show that and that .
(iii) Find an expression for in terms of and only.
Show that the points of inflection on lie on the -axis.
Hint
Graph: Zeroes at and one other point (: label not required) in .
Graph: Turning points at .
Graph: Quintic shape with curve below axis in and above axis in
The area conditions give . , so
Since is a quartic and the coefficient of is 1, must be a quintic and the coefficient of is . and , so must have double roots at and . So must have the given form.
[Explanation must be clear that the double roots are deduced from the fact that at those points.]
Let be the (positive) area enclosed by the curve between 0 and . The maximum turning point of occurs at , with . The minimum turning point of occurs at , with .
Therefore , with equality iff . So , with equality iff .
, with equality iff .
Since , either , or and .
Also, , so either , or and .
Thus and .
8(iii)
Section titled “8(iii)”So
The roots of the quadratic factor must be and .
Therefore at and and so and are points of inflection.
9 If the particles collide at time : , and (or )
Therefore,
Model Solution
Part (i)
Sketch of :
The quartic has leading coefficient 1 and roots with , so
Since is positive for (four negative factors), negative on , positive on , negative on , and positive for .
, so and . The turning points of are at (where ).
Let denote the positive area enclosed between and the -axis on . The area conditions state:
- Area on = Area on
- Area on = Area on
Since on : .
Since on : .
Since on : .
So has a minimum at with value , a maximum at with value , and . The curve dips below the axis on and rises above on , where is the unique zero of in (with ).
Why :
is the integral of a quartic with leading coefficient 1, so is a quintic with leading coefficient .
At : and , so has a double root at .
At : and , so has a double root at .
Since is a quintic with leading coefficient and double roots at and , it must have the form
for some constant . The remaining root is . Since and , by the intermediate value theorem has a zero between and , so , and in particular .
Computing :
Note , so
Part (ii)
Why :
We established that for all , with if and only if (the unique global minimum of on ). Since :
with equality if and only if . So for .
Showing or :
Evaluate the identity from part (i) at :
Since , we have , so .
The left side is , and , so , i.e., .
If : this is one of the two alternatives. If : then , which requires (the only point where equality holds). So either , or and .
Considering :
Similarly, for all , with if and only if . Since :
with equality if and only if .
Evaluate the identity at :
Since , we have , so .
Since , we need , i.e., .
Combining both results:
From the analysis: .
From the analysis: .
Therefore .
When , the identity for all . In particular:
From : since equality requires , we get .
From : since equality requires , we again get .
Therefore and .
Part (iii)
Expression for in terms of and :
With (from ):
Differentiating:
Using the product rule with and :
So
Points of inflection lie on the -axis:
The points of inflection of occur where . First compute :
Setting :
But the quadratic is exactly the same factor appearing in . Therefore precisely when , which means at those values of , the factor , so
The roots and satisfy and (since , we get and ), confirming they are the roots of in .
Therefore the points of inflection occur at and , and at both points . The points of inflection and lie on the -axis.
Examiner Notes
无官方评述。易错点:F(x)形式的推导需仔细利用面积条件和根的位置、F(b)+F(x)≥0的证明需要分析F的符号、c=2h的推导过程较长易出错。





