Intermediate

Direct and Inverse Proportion, and Rates of Change

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
R10·R11·R13·R14·R15

Direct Proportion (R10, R13, R14)

Two quantities are in direct proportion when doubling one doubles the other — their ratio stays constant.

Notation: means for some constant (the constant of proportionality).

Worked example is directly proportional to . When , . Find when .

Step 1 — find :

Step 2 — use the formula: . When :

Other direct proportion relationships (R13):

NotationEquationExample context
Distance ∝ time at constant speed
Area ∝ (radius)²
Pendulum period ∝ √(length)

Graphical representation (R14): is a straight line through the origin. The gradient equals .

Inverse Proportion (R10, R13)

Two quantities are in inverse proportion when doubling one halves the other.

Notation: means (equivalent to: is constant).

Worked example is inversely proportional to . When , . Find when .

Step 1 — find :

Step 2 — use the formula: . When :

Other inverse proportion relationships:

: — gravitational force ∝ 1/(distance²)

Graphical representation (R14): is a hyperbola — a curve in the first quadrant (and third if ) that approaches but does not touch the axes.

Setting up equations (Higher — R13): given a proportion statement (" is inversely proportional to the square root of "), write the equation , find from the given values, then use to find unknowns.

Compound Units (R11)

Compound units combine two or more base units. Formulas must be memorised:

Each formula rearranges as a triangle:

FormulaFind distanceFind time

Worked example — density:

An object has mass 450 g and volume 60 cm³. Find the density and material (iron ≈ 7.9 g/cm³, aluminium ≈ 2.7 g/cm³, wood ≈ 0.6 g/cm³).

g/cm³ — consistent with iron. ✓

Worked example — pressure:

A force of 120 N acts over an area of 0.4 m². Find the pressure.

N/m² (pascals) ✓

Unit pricing and rates of pay: "£12 per hour" means £12 for every 1 hour worked — a direct proportion with .

Gradient as Rate of Change (R14)

On a real-world graph, the gradient gives the rate at which the -quantity changes per unit of .

Graph typeGradient meaning
Distance-timeSpeed (m/s, km/h)
Velocity-timeAcceleration (m/s²)
Cost against timeRate of spending (£/day)
Mass against volumeDensity (g/cm³)

Direct proportion graphs are straight lines through the origin — the gradient is the constant of proportionality.

Inverse proportion graphs are hyperbolas — not linear, so the gradient is not constant.

Worked example — a car journey: the distance-time graph is a straight line from to (time in hours, distance in km). The gradient is km/h — the car's constant speed. ✓

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Instantaneous Rate of Change (R15 Higher)

On a curved graph, the gradient at a point is the instantaneous rate of change at that moment. Estimated by drawing a tangent to the curve at that point.

Average rate of change over an interval : gradient of the chord joining to .

Instantaneous rate at : gradient of the tangent drawn at the point .

Worked example — a velocity-time graph is curved. To estimate the acceleration at s, draw a tangent to the curve at the point where . Read two points off this tangent line: the tangent line passes through the points and .

Note: a chord connects two points that lie on the curve itself (not on the tangent). The chord joining the curve's points at and gives the average acceleration over that interval — a different (and larger) quantity than the instantaneous acceleration at .

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Direct and inverse — wrong formula setup

gives , not . The is a multiplier outside the power expression.

2. Compound units — wrong rearrangement

The formula triangle gives , , . Dividing distance by speed (not multiplying) gives time.

3. Proportion — using the ratio between the two input values, not finding first

If and when : to find when , find first, then . Do not use (coincidentally works for but fails for ).

4. Instantaneous vs average rate — drawing a chord instead of a tangent

A chord gives the average rate over an interval. The instantaneous rate requires the tangent at a single point.

MistakeCorrection
", so with negative " means , not
"Density = volume ÷ mass"Density = mass ÷ volume
"Gradient of chord = instantaneous rate at midpoint"Chord gives average rate; tangent gives instantaneous rate

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