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hscscience Maths Std · Y11
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Module 1 · L7 of 13 ~45 min ⚡ +75 XP available

Quadratic Formulas in Applied Contexts

Use supplied formulas with squared terms, calculate carefully, and interpret why outputs can grow faster than a constant-rate model.

Today's hook — A safety model estimates stopping distance with $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$, where $v$ is speed in km/h. Why might doubling the speed more than double the stopping distance?
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Worksheets

Practise this lesson

Three printable worksheets that build from foundations to mastery — or build your own from any module’s questions.

01
Think First — your gut answer first
+5 XP warm-up

A safety model estimates stopping distance with $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$, where $v$ is speed in km/h. Why might doubling the speed more than double the stopping distance?

Without calculating — write your gut explanation first.

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02
The formulas you need to use
+5 XP to read

Applied quadratic formulas are supplied — your job is to substitute carefully and interpret the result. A squared term changes the growth pattern entirely.

Stopping distance: $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$, where $D$ = stopping distance in metres and $v$ = speed in km/h.

Square area: $A = s^2$, where $A$ = area and $s$ = side length.

The key insight: $v^2$ means $v \times v$, not $2 \times v$. This is what makes the model nonlinear.

x y Vertex (2, 4) axis of symmetry x=0 x=4 y-int y = -(x-2)² + 4
$D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ grows faster than linearly as $v$ increases
Squared means multiplied by itself
$v^2 = v \times v$. If $v = 40$, then $v^2 = 1600$. It is not $2 \times 40 = 80$.
Nonlinear growth
Doubling the input more than doubles the output when a squared term is present.
Round at the end
Keep full calculator values until the final step. Early rounding can shift comparison results.
03
What you'll master
Know

Key facts

  • A quadratic formula contains a squared variable, such as $v^2$.
  • Squaring is different from doubling.
  • Rounding should usually happen at the end of a calculation.
Understand

Concepts

  • Quadratic models can grow faster than linear models.
  • The context determines whether the calculated value is reasonable.
  • Technology or careful substitution can be used when formulas are supplied.
Can do

Skills

  • Substitute into a formula containing a squared term.
  • Calculate and compare outputs from a quadratic model.
  • Interpret the result in context with suitable units.
04
Key terms
Quadratic formulaA formula that contains a squared variable, such as $v^2$ or $s^2$.
Squared term ($v^2$)The variable multiplied by itself: $v^2 = v \times v$. Not the same as $2v$.
Stopping distance ($D$)The total distance a vehicle travels from when the brakes are applied to when it stops. Measured in metres.
Nonlinear growthWhen output increases faster than a constant multiple of the input — caused by squared (or higher) terms.
SubstitutionReplacing a variable with its numerical value to calculate the formula output.
Square area ($A = s^2$)Area of a square equals side length multiplied by itself. Units are always square units (m², cm²).
05
Squared terms change the growth pattern
core concept

A squared term means a value is multiplied by itself. This changes how quickly the output grows as the input increases.

If $v = 40$, then $v^2 = 40^2 = 1600$. It does not mean $2 \times 40$.

In the stopping-distance formula $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$, the $0.01v^2$ part grows much faster than the $0.3v$ part as speed increases. This is why higher speeds are disproportionately dangerous.

Common error: $v^2$ means $v \times v$, not double $v$. Students sometimes write $40^2 = 80$ instead of $1600$.
What to write in your book
  • Quadratic formula: contains a squared variable, e.g. $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$.
  • $v^2 = v \times v$ (not $2 \times v$). Example: $50^2 = 2500$, not 100.
  • Stopping distance grows nonlinearly — the $v^2$ term makes it grow faster at higher speeds.
  • Area of a square: $A = s^2$. Units must be square units.

True or false: If $v = 6$, then $v^2 = 12$.

06
Round at the end
core concept

When using a formula with decimals and squared terms, keep full calculator values until the final answer, unless the question gives a specific rounding instruction.

Rounding too early can shift the final answer, especially when comparing two model outputs.

Rule: Calculate all intermediate steps exactly, then round the final answer to the required degree of accuracy.
What to write in your book
  • Round only at the final step of a calculation.
  • Early rounding can cause errors when comparing two outputs from the same model.
  • Always include units in the final answer (e.g. metres for stopping distance, m² for area).

Quick check: When should you round an answer when using a formula?

PROBLEM 1 · STOPPING DISTANCE

Use $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ to estimate the stopping distance when $v = 50$ km/h.

1
$D = 0.01(50)^2 + 0.3(50)$
Substitute $v = 50$ into the formula. Replace every $v$ with 50.
PROBLEM 2 · COMPARING TWO SPEEDS

Use $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ for $v = 40$ and $v = 80$. Does doubling speed double the stopping distance?

1
For $v = 40$: $D = 0.01(1600) + 0.3(40) = 16 + 12 = 28$ m
$40^2 = 1600$. Substitute into the formula.
PROBLEM 3 · AREA WITH SQUARED TERM

A square has side length $s = 7.5$ m. Use $A = s^2$ to find its area.

1
$A = (7.5)^2$
Substitute $s = 7.5$ into $A = s^2$.
What to write in your book
  • WE1: $v = 50$ km/h gives $D = 0.01(2500) + 15 = 40$ m.
  • WE2: At 40 km/h, $D = 28$ m. At 80 km/h, $D = 88$ m. Doubling speed more than triples stopping distance.
  • WE3: $A = (7.5)^2 = 56.25$ m². Area always uses square units.

Fill the gap: When $v = 60$ km/h, $v^2 =$ and $0.01 \times v^2 =$ .

Trap 01
Treating $v^2$ as $2v$
The most common error: $40^2 \ne 80$. Squaring means multiplying by itself: $40^2 = 40 \times 40 = 1600$. Always check your squaring step first.
Trap 02
Rounding too early
If you round $0.01 \times 2500 = 25.0$ to $25$ mid-calculation that's fine, but rounding decimal intermediate values before squaring can shift the final answer. Keep full precision until the end.
Trap 03
Forgetting square units for area
$A = s^2$ gives an area, so units must be m², cm², etc. Writing just "56.25" without units loses a mark. Include the unit at every step.
1

Use $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ to estimate stopping distance at 60 km/h.

2

Compare stopping distance at 30 km/h and 60 km/h. Does it double?

3

Use $A = s^2$ to find the area of a square with side length 12 cm.

4

Explain why $12^2$ is not the same as $2 \times 12$.

Match each value of $v$ to its correct $v^2$:

In your own words: Why does the stopping-distance model $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ grow faster than a linear model as speed increases?

10
Revisit the stopping-distance model

Doubling speed can more than double stopping distance because the formula includes $v^2$. This makes the model nonlinear.

Earlier you predicted why doubling speed might more than double stopping distance. Check your answer against the worked examples.

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01
Multiple choice
+5 XP per correct · +25 XP all-correct

Pick your answer, then rate your confidence — that tells the system what to drill next. Each retry pulls a fresh mix from the bank.

02
Short answer

Use supplied formulas and interpret the result.

ApplyBand 33 marks

Q1. Use $D = 0.01v^2 + 0.3v$ to estimate stopping distance when $v = 70$ km/h. Show full working. (3 marks)

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ApplyBand 32 marks

Q2. Use $A = s^2$ to find the area of a square with side length 8.5 m. Include units. (2 marks)

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AnalyseBand 42 marks

Q3. Explain why a formula containing $v^2$ may not behave like a constant-rate formula. (2 marks)

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📖 Answers (click to reveal)

Drill 1: $D = 0.01(3600) + 0.3(60) = 36 + 18 = 54$ m.

Drill 2: At 30 km/h: $D = 0.01(900) + 9 = 18$ m. At 60 km/h: $D = 54$ m. Ratio = $54 \div 18 = 3$. No — it triples, not doubles.

Drill 3: $A = 12^2 = 144$ cm².

Drill 4: $12^2 = 12 \times 12 = 144$. $2 \times 12 = 24$. Squaring means multiplying by itself, not by 2.

Q1 (3 marks): $D = 0.01(70)^2 + 0.3(70)$ [1] $= 0.01(4900) + 21$ [1] $= 49 + 21 = 70$ m [1].

Q2 (2 marks): $A = (8.5)^2 = 72.25$ m² [2]. (1 mark if correct calculation, second mark for units.)

Q3 (2 marks): The squared term $v^2$ grows faster than $v$ as $v$ increases [1], so doubling the input more than doubles the output — unlike a linear formula where output changes by a constant rate [1].

01
Boss battle · Square-Term Sprint
earn bronze · silver · gold

For each formula, identify the squared term, substitute carefully, and say what the output means. Beat the boss to bank a tier.

⚔ Enter the arena
02
Science Jump · platform challenge

Climb platforms by answering quadratic formula questions. Pool: lesson 7.

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