Asked by nut
Use the image to answer the question.
The image shows the graph of the system of linear equations {y=2x+2y=2x−4
{
𝑦
=
2
𝑥
+
2
𝑦
=
2
𝑥
−
4
. Which of the following points, if any, are solutions to the system of equations?
(1 point)
Responses
(0,2)
(
0
,
2
)
open paren 0 comma 2 close paren
(0,−4)
(
0
,
−
4
)
open paren 0 comma negative 4 close paren
Neither of these points are solutions.
Neither of these points are solutions.
Both of these points are solutions.
The image shows the graph of the system of linear equations {y=2x+2y=2x−4
{
𝑦
=
2
𝑥
+
2
𝑦
=
2
𝑥
−
4
. Which of the following points, if any, are solutions to the system of equations?
(1 point)
Responses
(0,2)
(
0
,
2
)
open paren 0 comma 2 close paren
(0,−4)
(
0
,
−
4
)
open paren 0 comma negative 4 close paren
Neither of these points are solutions.
Neither of these points are solutions.
Both of these points are solutions.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To determine if the points (0, 2) and (0, -4) are solutions to the system of equations given by \( y = 2x + 2 \) and \( y = 2x - 4 \), we can substitute the x-coordinates of each point into both equations.
1. For the point (0, 2):
- Substitute \( x = 0 \) into the first equation:
\[
y = 2(0) + 2 = 2
\]
So the point (0, 2) satisfies the first equation.
- Now substitute \( x = 0 \) into the second equation:
\[
y = 2(0) - 4 = -4
\]
So the point (0, 2) does not satisfy the second equation.
2. For the point (0, -4):
- Substitute \( x = 0 \) into the first equation:
\[
y = 2(0) + 2 = 2
\]
So the point (0, -4) does not satisfy the first equation.
- Now substitute \( x = 0 \) into the second equation:
\[
y = 2(0) - 4 = -4
\]
So the point (0, -4) satisfies the second equation.
Since neither of the points (0, 2) nor (0, -4) satisfies both equations, the correct response is:
**Neither of these points are solutions.**
1. For the point (0, 2):
- Substitute \( x = 0 \) into the first equation:
\[
y = 2(0) + 2 = 2
\]
So the point (0, 2) satisfies the first equation.
- Now substitute \( x = 0 \) into the second equation:
\[
y = 2(0) - 4 = -4
\]
So the point (0, 2) does not satisfy the second equation.
2. For the point (0, -4):
- Substitute \( x = 0 \) into the first equation:
\[
y = 2(0) + 2 = 2
\]
So the point (0, -4) does not satisfy the first equation.
- Now substitute \( x = 0 \) into the second equation:
\[
y = 2(0) - 4 = -4
\]
So the point (0, -4) satisfies the second equation.
Since neither of the points (0, 2) nor (0, -4) satisfies both equations, the correct response is:
**Neither of these points are solutions.**
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.