Let us start with these two equations of two lines: x + y = 4 x &#x2212;<

Sonia Ayers

Sonia Ayers

Answered question

2022-07-08

Let us start with these two equations of two lines:
x + y = 4
x y = 2
They intersect at ( x , y ) = ( 3 , 1 )
Let us now translate (move) both lines so that they intersect at (0, 0). We need to move both lines by -3 along x-axis and by -1 along y-axis. So the equations of the lines become.
( x + 3 ) + ( y + 1 ) = 4
( x + 3 ) ( y + 1 ) = 2
This is equivalent to
x + y = 0
x y = 0
Why do the RHS become 0 for both equations? This happens no matter which two intersecting lines we begin with. What is the geometrical interpretation of this?

Answer & Explanation

Tatiana Gentry

Tatiana Gentry

Beginner2022-07-09Added 10 answers

Step 1
The RHS is always zero for any line that goes through the origin.
Think about it this way, if
a x + b y = c
for c 0 then (0, 0) isn't a solution to this equation since
a ( 0 ) + b ( 0 ) = 0 c .
Therefore the only way for the point (0, 0) to be on your line is for the RHS to be 0.

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