<< Chapter < Page | Chapter >> Page > |
I’m sure you remember our whole unit on solving linear equations…by graphing, by substitution, and by elimination. Well, now we’re going to find a new way of solving those equations…by using matrices!
Glad you asked! There are two reasons. First, this new method can be done entirely on a calculator.
Yeah, I know. But here’s the even better reason. Suppose I gave you three equations with three unknowns, and asked you to do
that on a calculator. Think you could do it?
So, here we go. Let’s start with a problem from an earlier homework assignment. I gave you this matrix equation:
The first thing you had to do was to rewrite this as two equations with two unknowns. Do that now. (Don’t bother solving for and , just set up the equations.)
The point is that one matrix equation is the same, in this case, as two simultaneous equations. What we’re interested in doing is doing that process in reverse : I give you simultaneous equations, and you turn them into a matrix equation that represents the same thing. Let’s try a few.
Write a single matrix equation that represents the two equations:
Now, let’s look at three equations:
OK, by now you are convinced that we can take simultaneous linear equations and rewrite them as a single matrix equation. In each case, the matrix equation looks like this:
where is a big square matrix, and and are column matrices. is the matrix that we want to solve for—that is, it has all our variables in it, so if we find what is, we find what our variables are. (For instance, in that last example, was .) So how do you solve something like this for ? Time for some matrix algebra! We can’t divide both sides by , because we have not defined matrix division. But we can do the next best thing.
Take the equation , where , , and are all matrices. Multiply both sides by (the inverse of ) in front. (Why did I say “in front?” Remember that order matters when multiplying matrices. If we put in front of both sides, we have done the same thing to both sides.)
Now, we have —gee, didn’t that equal something? Oh, yeah…rewrite the equation simplifying that part.
Now, we’re multiplying by something…what does that do again? Oh, yeah…rewrite the equation again a bit simpler.
We’re done! We have now solved for the matrix .
Oh, yeah…let’s go back to the beginning. Let’s say I gave you these two equations:
You showed in #2 how to rewrite this as one matrix equation . And you just found in #6 how to solve such an equation for . So go ahead and plug and into your calculator, and then use the formula to ask your calculator directly for the answer!
Solve those two equations for and by using matrices on your calculator.
Did it work? We find out the same way we always have—plug our and values into the original equations and make sure they work.
Check your answer to #7.
Now, solve the three simultaneous equations from #3 on your calculator, and check the answers.
Notification Switch
Would you like to follow the 'Advanced algebra ii: activities and homework' conversation and receive update notifications?