We intentionally make it difficult to delete questions, as that ultimately subverts our mission. As noted by Shog9, a former community manager:
We're trying to create a library of reusable information here, with the idea that if someone takes the time to define their problem and then search for it they won't have to ask a question at all! When it works, any answer can go on to benefit many people beyond the person who asked the question...
We also need to be fair to the people who took time to help you. As explained in the Help Center article, "I've thought better of my question; can I delete it?":
If your question has good answers, though, it's not fair to have those answers removed along with your question: other users put effort into helping you and even if you no longer want the answers, somebody else might. This is why the system prevents you from deleting answered questions most of the time.
Those two reasons alone make up about 99% of the basis for our policy restricting self-deletion of questions. Someone took the time to help you. They shouldn't be penalized for your mistake. But there's a far larger problem you're facing, namely:
The Internet doesn't forget easily
Search engines crawl/spider Stack Overflow very aggressively. In many cases, questions are picked up by Google less than 30 minutes after posting and can survive in search results long after the question is deleted. There are also "scraper" sites that might pick it up as well and repost it as you posted it. Your question is virtually guaranteed to hang around in some form or another on the Internet, whether you delete or dissociate it.
But I'll be failed or expelled if it's not deleted NOW!
Maybe. You might want to have an open talk with your professors about this (especially before they start looking and find the evidence themselves). It's possible that things can be salvaged. There are legitimate ways to ask for help that do not constitute outright cheating. But, ultimately, you should understand that your college/university has to uphold their integrity. As one tutor complained upon finding evidence of cheating on Stack Overflow:
I care about the academic integrity of our program; finding misconduct is my full time job. If you are going to cheat, it's pretty much you versus me.
Think about it: you're trying to get a piece of paper that meaningfully says you met their criteria for graduation (i.e., a degree). If you get away with this, how many others have as well? It diminishes the value of your degree. You should also consider that you're really cheating yourself by posting homework here. As noted in Software Engineering's "open letter to students with homework problems":
Copy and paste takes no skill. It cheats you out of the education you are paying to get.
It cheats us of good interview candidates. Technical interviewers often complain about the quality of college graduates. You may be enthusiastic, but unless you can write code and explain concepts better than the other person, we're going to hire the other person.
TL;DR: I can't get it deleted?
In most cases, no. There is no fast solution here, let alone one that will keep the evidence hidden. Moderators will not assist you in covering up evidence of academic dishonesty. The only basis on which we will delete questions is the value they provide to this site.
If you still have questions, please be sure you have read the Help Center on deletion alternatives first before flagging.