<< Chapter < Page | Chapter >> Page > |
A line passes through the points, and Find the equation of a perpendicular line that passes through the point,
A system of linear equations includes two or more linear equations. The graphs of two lines will intersect at a single point if they are not parallel. Two parallel lines can also intersect if they are coincident, which means they are the same line and they intersect at every point. For two lines that are not parallel, the single point of intersection will satisfy both equations and therefore represent the solution to the system.
To find this point when the equations are given as functions, we can solve for an input value so that In other words, we can set the formulas for the lines equal to one another, and solve for the input that satisfies the equation.
Find the point of intersection of the lines and
Set
This tells us the lines intersect when the input is
We can then find the output value of the intersection point by evaluating either function at this input.
These lines intersect at the point
If we were asked to find the point of intersection of two distinct parallel lines, should something in the solution process alert us to the fact that there are no solutions?
Yes. After setting the two equations equal to one another, the result would be the contradiction “0 = non-zero real number”.
Look at the graph in [link] and identify the following for the function
A company sells sports helmets. The company incurs a one-time fixed cost for $250,000. Each helmet costs $120 to produce, and sells for $140.
To find evaluate either the revenue or the cost function at 12,500.
The break-even point is
Notification Switch
Would you like to follow the 'Precalculus' conversation and receive update notifications?