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practice it pick-3 practice: number of solutions choose any three of th…

Question

practice it
pick-3 practice: number of solutions
choose any three of the problems below and complete them.

  1. given the graph of ( y = 3x - 9 ) and ( y = -\frac{1}{2}x + 12 )

a. identify the number of solutions
b. if possible, find one solution to the system. if there are no solutions, justify how you know.

  1. you are given the graph of ( y = -\frac{1}{3}x - 6 ) and ( y = \frac{1}{5}x + 10 )

how many solutions are there to this system? explain how you know.

  1. how many solutions are there to the system of equations ( y = \frac{2}{3}x - 7 ) and ( y = \frac{2}{3}x + 2 )? justify your response.
  2. given the system of equations: ( y = 3x + 4 ) and ( 2y = 6x + 8 )

a. how many solutions are there? explain your reasoning.
b. if possible, find one solution to the system. if there are no solutions, justify how you know.

  1. write a system of equations with zero solutions. graph the system.
  2. given the equation ( y = -\frac{1}{2}x + 5 ), use this desmos graph to write a second equation that creates a system with a solution at ( (4, 3) ).

Explanation:

Step1: Solve problem 1a: Count intersections

The two lines intersect once, so there is 1 solution.

Step1: Solve problem 1b: Find intersection

Set equations equal: $3x - 9 = -\frac{1}{2}x + 12$
Multiply by 2: $6x - 18 = -x + 24$
Combine like terms: $7x = 42$
Solve for $x$: $x = 6$
Substitute $x=6$: $y=3(6)-9=9$

Step1: Solve problem 3: Check slopes

Both lines have slope $\frac{2}{3}$, different y-intercepts. Parallel lines never intersect, so 0 solutions.

Step1: Solve problem 4a: Simplify second equation

Divide $2y=6x+8$ by 2: $y=3x+4$, same as first equation. Coinciding lines have infinitely many solutions.

Step1: Solve problem 4b: Find a solution

Substitute $x=0$: $y=3(0)+4=4$, so $(0,4)$ is a solution.

Answer:

1.
a. 1 solution
b. $(6, 9)$

  1. 0 solutions; the lines are parallel (same slope, different y-intercepts) so they never intersect.

4.
a. Infinitely many solutions; the two equations simplify to the same line, so every point on the line is a solution.
b. One solution is $(0, 4)$ (any point satisfying $y=3x+4$ is valid)