MCQ
$\int_{}^{} {\frac{{{a^x}}}{{\sqrt {1 - {a^{2x}}} }}dx = } $
- ✓$\frac{1}{{\log a}}{\sin ^{ - 1}}{a^x} + c$
- B${\sin ^{ - 1}}{a^x} + c$
- C$\frac{1}{{\log a}}{\cos ^{ - 1}}{a^x} + c$
- D${\cos ^{ - 1}}{a^x} + c$
Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.
$x+y+\alpha z=2$
$3 x+y+z=4$
$x+2 z=1$
have a unique solution $\left(x^{*}, y^{*}, z^{*}\right)$. If $\left(\alpha, x^{*}\right),\left(y^{*}, \alpha\right)$ and $\left(x^{*},-y^{*}\right)$ are collinear points, then the sum of absolute values of all possible values of $\alpha$ is
Statement $1$ : The function $f$ has a local extremum at $x = 0$
Statement $2$ : The function $f$ is continuous and differentiable on $\left( { - \infty ,\infty } \right)$ and $f'(0) = 0$