SUMMER 2026
PREDICTED PAPER
Mark Scheme (Results)
Summer 2026
Pearson Edexcel GCE
AS Mathematics (8MA0)
Paper 01 Pure Mathematics
for more resources: tyrionpapers.com
,1 Differentiate
(i) 5x
(ii) 2x 3
1
(iii) x 2
Answer
Use the 'powers of ' differentiation rule,
I.e. 'multiply by the power, then reduce the power by 1'
Remember the special case
(i)
[B1]
(ii)
[B1]
for more: tyrionpapers.com
, (iii)
[B1]
Examiner Tips and Tricks
1
−
2
1 1
By laws of indices, x = 1
= . So you could also write this answer as
x
x2
dy 1 ⎛⎜ 1 ⎞⎟ 1
= ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ = .
dx 2 ⎝ x ⎠ 2 x
(3 marks)
2 ABC is a right-angled triangle. AB = 38 m and angle CAB = 74°.
Calculate the length of AC. for more: tyrionpapers.com
, Give your answer correct to one decimal place.
Answer
(2 marks)
3 "The difference between any two square numbers is always odd."
Disprove this statement by means of a counter example.
Answer
One way to find a counter example is to start by listing the first few square numbers
1, 4, 9, ...
Then look at different combinations of their differences to see if any give an even
number
9 - 1 = 8 which is even, so it is not true that the difference between any two square
numbers is always odd
for more: tyrionpapers.com
PREDICTED PAPER
Mark Scheme (Results)
Summer 2026
Pearson Edexcel GCE
AS Mathematics (8MA0)
Paper 01 Pure Mathematics
for more resources: tyrionpapers.com
,1 Differentiate
(i) 5x
(ii) 2x 3
1
(iii) x 2
Answer
Use the 'powers of ' differentiation rule,
I.e. 'multiply by the power, then reduce the power by 1'
Remember the special case
(i)
[B1]
(ii)
[B1]
for more: tyrionpapers.com
, (iii)
[B1]
Examiner Tips and Tricks
1
−
2
1 1
By laws of indices, x = 1
= . So you could also write this answer as
x
x2
dy 1 ⎛⎜ 1 ⎞⎟ 1
= ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ = .
dx 2 ⎝ x ⎠ 2 x
(3 marks)
2 ABC is a right-angled triangle. AB = 38 m and angle CAB = 74°.
Calculate the length of AC. for more: tyrionpapers.com
, Give your answer correct to one decimal place.
Answer
(2 marks)
3 "The difference between any two square numbers is always odd."
Disprove this statement by means of a counter example.
Answer
One way to find a counter example is to start by listing the first few square numbers
1, 4, 9, ...
Then look at different combinations of their differences to see if any give an even
number
9 - 1 = 8 which is even, so it is not true that the difference between any two square
numbers is always odd
for more: tyrionpapers.com