Determine a so that the intersection line between the planes P 1 </msub> :

Gabriella Sellers

Gabriella Sellers

Answered question

2022-06-14

Determine a so that the intersection line between the planes
P 1 : 2 x + a y z = 3
P 2 : x 2 y + a z = 5
are parallel to the plane P 3 : 2 x + y + z = 2

Answer & Explanation

nuvolor8

nuvolor8

Beginner2022-06-15Added 32 answers

Step 1
You can directly solve for
| 2 a 1 1 2 a 2 1 1 | = 0
There are various justifications for this.
First, as P 1 and P 2 have linear independent normals, there is a single line of intersection. Because that line does not pass through P 3 , there is no solution (x,y,z) to the set of three equations, hence the determinant is 0.
Secondly, the line is perpendicular to the normals of P 1 and P 2 so it's calculated via a cross product. The line is perpendicular to the third normal as well so their dot product is 0. Put it together we have the scalar triple product is 0.
EDIT: One should verify that the line does not lie on the third plane, because both justifications also work if the planes meet at a single line (infinite solutions).
Quintin Stafford

Quintin Stafford

Beginner2022-06-16Added 4 answers

Step 1
Indirect approach: We first find the direction numbers of the line L resulting from intersection of two planes:
l = | a 1 2 a | = a 2 1
m = | 1 2 a 1 | = 1 2 a
n = | 2 a 1 2 | = a 4
The normal of plane are N p : ( A = 2 , B = 1 , C = 1 ) and we must have L N p ; the condition is that:
l × A + m × B + n × C = 0
which gives this equation:
2 a 2 3 a 9 = 0
which it's roots are a = 3 and a = 3 2
Using this method you can conclude the method mentioned in other answer.

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