Find the values of k for which the simultaneous equations do not have a unique solution for x

Rapsinincke

Rapsinincke

Answered question

2022-07-02

Find the values of k for which the simultaneous equations do not have a unique solution for x , y and z.
Also show that when k = 2 the equations are inconsistent
k x + 2 y + z = 0
3 x + 0 y 2 z = 4
3 x 6 k y 4 z = 14
Using a determinant and setting to zero, then solving the quadratic gives
| k 2 1 3 0 2 3 6 k 4 | = 0
k = 2 , k = 1 2
So far so good, but when subbing 2 for k
2 x + 2 y + z = 0 . . . e q n 1
3 x + 0 y 2 z = 4 . . . e q n 2
3 x + 12 y 4 z = 14 . . . e q n 3
subbing eqn 2 from eqn 3 gives
12 y 2 z = 10
y = 5 + z 6
Subbing for y into eqn 1
2 x + 5 + z 3 z = 0
x = 5 2 z 6
Subbing for y and x into eqn 3
5 2 z 2 + 10 2 z = 14
z = 1 2 , x = 1 a n d y = 3 4
These values for x , y and z seem to prove unique solutions for these equations, yet from the determinant and also the question in the text book should they not be inconsistent?

Answer & Explanation

karburitc

karburitc

Beginner2022-07-03Added 7 answers

Firstly, a non-zero determinant doesn't imply there are no solutions. The system of equations
[ 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 ]
has an infinite number of solutions, for example, and the relevant determinant will be zero. So, we can't be sure the system will be inconsistent from a zero determinant alone.
The matrix
[ 2 2 1 0 3 0 2 4 3 12 4 14 ]
has row echelon form
R 3 R 3 R 2 [ 2 2 1 0 3 0 2 4 0 12 2 10 ] R 2 R 2 + 3 2 R 1 [ 2 2 1 0 0 3 0.5 4 0 12 2 10 ] R 3 R 3 4 R 2 [ 2 2 1 0 0 3 0.5 4 0 0 0 6 ]
which is inconsistent. So, no solutions exist.

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