10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Warm­up: 2. Solve the system. ­x + 6y = 8 2x ­ 12y = ­14 1. Solve the system. 2x ­ y = 11 x + 2y = ­7 3. Determine whether the point (1, 3) is a solution of each equation in the system. 2x + 5y = 17 ­4x + 3y = 5 Oct 19­5:24 PM 1 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Dec 1­12:20 PM 2 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Dec 1­12:22 PM 3 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Dec 1­12:23 PM 4 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 10.1 Systems of Linear Equations: Substitution and Elimination Day 2 Objectives : 1. Identify inconsistent systems of equations containing three variables. 2. Solve systems of three equations containing three variables. 3. Express the solution of a system of dependent equations containing three variables. Nov 9­12:04 PM 5 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Systems of Three Equations Containing Three Variables Example: x ­ 3y + 3z = ­4 2x + 3y ­ z = 15 4x ­ 3y ­ z = 19 The graph of any equation of the form Ax + By + Cz = D is a plane. The solutions of a three­variable system can be shown graphically as the intersection of planes. Oct 19­5:16 PM 6 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Systems of Three Equations Containing Three Variables One Solution The planes intersect at one common point. Many Solutions No Solution No point lies in all The planes intersect at all the points along three planes. a common line. Solution System is consistent and equations are independent. System is consistent and equations are dependent. System is inconsistent. Oct 19­5:16 PM 7 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination. x ­ 3y + 3z = ­4 2x + 3y ­ z = 15 4x ­ 3y ­ z = 19 Step 1: Pair the equations to eliminate one of the variables. Step 2: Write the two new equations as a system with two variables. Step 3: Solve for the two variables in the new system. Oct 19­5:20 PM 8 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination. x ­ 3y + 3z = ­4 2x + 3y ­ z = 15 4x ­ 3y ­ z = 19 Step 4: Find the last variable by back­substitution. Step 5: State your results and check your answer. (5, 1, ­2) Oct 19­5:20 PM 9 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination! 2x + y ­ z = ­2 x + 2y ­ z = ­9 x ­ 4y + z = 1 no solution inconsistent Oct 19­5:20 PM 10 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 Try Another! December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination. 2x + y ­ z = 5 3x ­ y + 2z = ­1 x ­ y ­ z = 0 (1, 2, ­1) Oct 19­5:20 PM 11 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination. x ­ 2y ­ z = 8 2x ­ 3y + z = 23 4x ­ 5y + 5z = 53 many solutions Oct 19­6:15 PM 12 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 This one's a little harder! December 01, 2010 Solve the system by elimination. 2x + y ­ z = 5 x + 4y + 2z = 16 15x + 6y ­ 2z = 12 (­2, 6, ­3) Oct 19­6:15 PM 13 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Theater Revenues: A Broadway theater has 500 seats, divided into orchestra, main, and balcony seating. Orchestra seats sell for $50, main seats for $35, and balcony seats for $25. If all the seats are sold, the gross revenue to the theater is $17,100. If all the main and balcony seats are sold, but only half the orchestra seats are sold, the gross revenue is $14,600. How many are there of each kind of seat? 100 orchestra 210 main 190 balcony Nov 28­1:36 PM 14 10.1 Day 2 Systems of Linear Equations 2010 December 01, 2010 Homework page 738 (15 ­ 16, 41 ­ 43, 46, 48, 76) Nov 28­12:53 PM 15