SAT II Math Level Two May 2012

<p>Yes.</p>

<p>10char.</p>

<p>I’m sorry but I’m a little slow =P
Why is that?</p>

<p>About the p^3 question - it doesn’t matter if it’s three prime factors or three distinct factors; in both cases, that’s wrong.</p>

<p>If it’s three prime factors, the only prime factor is p. That’s one.
If it’s three distinct factors, the only factors are 1, p, p^2, and p^3. That’s four.</p>

<p>Side A is less than the height (6sin(42 degrees)), so it can’t touch the base and form a triangle.</p>

<p>So what’s the consensus on the p^3 and car questions? I put only II for the former and 6! for the latter.</p>

<p>Hey guys, two questions, I heard “colleges don’t accept score choice (ie stanford”) but isn’t that only true for the real SAT not SAT 2
secondly, I’m at 5 wrong, and 2 omits, where does that place me?</p>

<p>^ It depends on the school. Some require all tests, including Subject Tests. Not sure about Stanford. </p>

<p>At 5 wrong, 2 omit, you’re at a 42 raw score. That translates to a 780-790. I think it could be an 800 on some tests, but I doubt it is on this one.</p>

<p>what was the polar coordinates one? i think one of the answer choices was (1, pi)
lol just thought of this extemporaneously</p>

<p>The question asked for a point lying on r = cos(x). I think the answer was (1/2, pi/3).</p>

<p>I got the same ^^</p>

<p>Cynosuree, what do you think about p^3 and the cars questions? Those are the only ones I’m hung up on.</p>

<p>I forget the exact answers but for p^3 I said that there was only one prime factor. It couldn’t be an odd number (because 2^3 = 8) and there will be more than 3 factors… (N, 1, P, P^2)</p>

<p>Cars I said 6!
There were 8 cars and two had to be in a certain position, so they’re pretty much taken out of the equation</p>

<p>so i omitted three and got three wrong so far… i’m fairly certain i’m going to cancel. what do you guys think?</p>

<p>oh jeez… 44 raw… cutting it too close for me. What was the one about the imaginary graph? was it -2i and at point B?</p>

<p>Question was something like this… which number if inputted into the set (4,5,8,8,12) will make the median and mean equal. range has to be less than ten.</p>

<p>both 6.5 and 11 works for this one to my knowledge… Can anyone prove me wrong??</p>

<p>@rabbit 124 dont cancel, the test was somewhat hard and you’re at a 43 raw so youre on the 800 cutoff. if you miss one more, cancel.</p>

<p>Can you live with yourself if you get anything other than an 800? </p>

<p>To be honest, it seems ridiculous to cancel when there’s really so little difference between a 750 and an 800 - colleges won’t care. I strongly recommend against doing it.</p>

<p>11 is correct because it is the only INTEGER answer.</p>

<p>ooo shoot i dont remember that… Lol my friend and i were freaking out… thanks dude</p>

<p>what did you get for the imaginary one was it -2i and point B? I know it was an easy question but at this point, I doubt everything.</p>

<p>How did u do the Polar coordinates one for rcos(theta)</p>