QUESTION IMAGE
Question
svlc algebra 1a - standard (15260)
solving systems of linear equations: graphing
how many solutions does this linear system have?
y = -6x + 2
-12x - 2y = -4
one solution: (0, 0)
one solution: (1, -4)
infinite number of solutions
no solution
?retest \tmark and return \t8 of 10 \tsave & exit
Step1: Simplify the second equation
Start with the second equation \(-12x - 2y = -4\). Divide every term by \(-2\) to simplify:
\(\frac{-12x}{-2}+\frac{-2y}{-2}=\frac{-4}{-2}\)
Which simplifies to \(6x + y = 2\). Then, solve for \(y\): \(y=-6x + 2\).
Step2: Compare the two equations
The first equation is \(y = -6x + 2\), and the simplified second equation is also \(y=-6x + 2\). This means the two linear equations are identical (they represent the same line).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
infinite number of solutions