Asked by Dan
Consider the system
x-2y=k-1
4x+(1-k^2)y=8
For what values of k does the system have
a. unique solution?
b. infinitely many solutions?
c. no solution?
x-2y=k-1
4x+(1-k^2)y=8
For what values of k does the system have
a. unique solution?
b. infinitely many solutions?
c. no solution?
Answers
Answered by
Steve
rearranging things a bit, you have
y = x/2 + (1-k)/2
y = 4x/(k^2-1) + 8/(1-k^2)
for infinitely many solution, we need
y = mx+b
y = mx+c
where b=c
same slope:
1/2 = 4/(k^2-1)
k^2-1 = 8
k^2 = 9
k = ±3
b=c:
(1-k)/2 = 8/(1-k^2)
(1-k)(1-k^2) = 16
k=3
So, if k=3 there are infinitely many solutions.
If k = -3, there are no solutions.
For any other value of k, there is one solution.
y = x/2 + (1-k)/2
y = 4x/(k^2-1) + 8/(1-k^2)
for infinitely many solution, we need
y = mx+b
y = mx+c
where b=c
same slope:
1/2 = 4/(k^2-1)
k^2-1 = 8
k^2 = 9
k = ±3
b=c:
(1-k)/2 = 8/(1-k^2)
(1-k)(1-k^2) = 16
k=3
So, if k=3 there are infinitely many solutions.
If k = -3, there are no solutions.
For any other value of k, there is one solution.
Answered by
Dan
Can you perform using matrix? Thank you very much
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