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Homework Help Thread

Cniall thank you... Even though it was late, apparently the french teach didn't care if we finished it or not! But thanks anyway... If anyone needs homework help this is where to get it!
 
Ugh, I didn't feel like paying attention in class...

Line j is perpendicular to the line with the given equation and the line j passes through P. Write an equation of line j.

3.) 4x + 7y = 13, P(-2,6)

This might seem very easy to some, but my interest is not in math. I don't want others to only give the answers. Tell me how to do problems like this.
 
The key here is how perpendicular lines are related to one another. Specifically, they intersect one another at ninety-degree angles. In order to do so, their slopes have to be opposite reciprocals. You can show this by using geometry, but if you haven't done that yet, you can think of what you're doing as making the lines opposites of one another. If one line has a positive slope, then the other needs to have the opposite, or a negative slope. At the same time, if one line has a strongly positive slope, its opposite's negative is going to be weak, and vice versa. So, to make the slopes opposites, you first flip the sign on the slope, then flip the slope itself, turning it upside-down. A line with a slope of 1 is perpendicular to one with a slope of -1. A line with a slope of 2 is perpendicular to one with a slope of -1/2, and so on.

After that, you need to finish the equation so that the line also passes through the given point. Hopefully you've been taught that the general equation for a line is y = mx + b. You already have m, because that's the slope. You also have an x and y--those are the x and y values for the point you've been given. All you need to do at this point is plug the x and y you've been given into the general line equation, along with the slope you already found, and then solve to find b.

Dunno, there are no doubt people who could manage a much better explanation than that, but that's the method, anyway. I wasn't sure whether you wanted that problem done as an example or not, so I just wrote this in very general terms.
 
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Thanks for the explanation, but I'll need the problem to be done as an example then compare my answer. I want to see if I have the right idea, if not, I'll just go with what I have.
 
Right.

First, finding the slope of the original line.

4x + 7y = 13
y = -4x + 13
y = -4/7x + 13/7

The slope of the original line is therefore -4/7. Which means that the slope of the new line is going to be 7/4--flip the sign from negative to positive, then turn the fraction upside-down. The equation for the new line is thus far y = 7/4x + b.

Now plug in the point and solve for b, which is the y-intercept. The point we're given is (-2, 6).

6 = (7/4)(-2) + b
6 = -14/4 + b
6 + 14/4 = b
38/4 = b
19/2 = b

Plug that back into the equation, and you have the final answer: y = 7/4x + 19/2. To check your work, plug in six for y and see that you get -2 or plug in -2 for x and see that you get six for y.

Sorry, I messed up what I said in the earlier post--the slope is supposed to be the opposite reciprocal rather than just the opposite. I'll edit that explanation in in a moment.
 
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Great! I had to leave out 13/7 in the other equation, and replace it with b. Less confusing now. Thanks for the help! ^_-
 
Great! I had to leave out 13/7 in the other equation, and replace it with b.
Truthfully, what you're doing is taking out the b and replacing it with 13/7 when you look at the first equation. All linear equations have a general "b" in them; what it is specifically is just different from line to line.

Anyway, you're welcome, and sorry for screwing it up. =/
 
Blegh. So, for Social Studies we have to do this research/brochure/thing on an American colony, and, knowing full well that it was owned by Massachusetts, I picked Maine. Basically I have to research stuffs about Maine (Government, History, Religion, Jobs/Economy, etc.) and it's proving impossible to find much of anything.

Does anyone know a good website to research about all that stuff?
 
Wikipedia for a basic overview, then look up the sources cited/external links for more dedicated resources.

I'm sure your library has books about Maine in it, too.
 
Hmm. I'm getting plenty of info about Maine's history, but not much about actual goings-on in the 17th century, so I think I'll just go to the library tomorrow and find a book or three about Maine, and do my other homework I was planning to do tomorrow today.

Anyway, books seem to be a lot more helpful in this subject than Wikipedia and Google are being; I found loads of information in our school's encyclopedias.
 
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