1 / 19

1.4 Lines

1.4 Lines. Essential Question: How can you use the equations of two non-vertical lines to tell whether the lines are parallel or perpendicular?. An arithmetic sequence is nothing more than a linear equation… {3, 8, 13, 18, … } → u n = 3 + (n - 1)(5) → u n = 3 + 5n – 5 → u n = 5n – 2

seven
Télécharger la présentation

1.4 Lines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1.4 Lines Essential Question: How can you use the equations of two non-vertical lines to tell whether the lines are parallel or perpendicular?

  2. An arithmetic sequence is nothing more than a linear equation… • {3, 8, 13, 18, … }→ un = 3 + (n - 1)(5)→ un = 3 + 5n – 5→ un = 5n – 2 • If we replace n with x and un with y, we have the linear equation: y = 5x – 2 • The sequence above corresponds to the points { (1, 3), (2, 8), (3, 13), (4, 18), … } 1.4 Lines

  3. Slope • Change in y ÷ change in x • Δ y ÷Δx (delta y ÷ delta x) • Example 1 • Find the slope of the line that passes through (0,-1) and (4,1) 1.4 Lines

  4. Finding Slope From a Graph • Find two points on the coordinate plane, and use the slope formula • Properties of Slope • If m > 0, the line rises from left to right. The larger m is, the more steeply the line rises. • If m = 0, the line is horizontal • If m < 0, the line falls from left to right. The larger m is, the more steeply the line falls. 1.4 Lines

  5. Slope-Intercept Form • y = mx + b • “m” is the slope • “b” is the y-intercept (the point where the graph crosses the y-axis) • Example 3: Graphs of Arithmetic Sequences • 1st three terms of an arithmetic sequence are -2, 3, and 8. Use an explicit function and compare it to slope-intercept form 1.4 Lines

  6. Example 3 (Continued) • Sequence: -2, 3, 8, … • Explicit form: un = u1 + (n-1)(d) • u1 = , d = • What connection(s) do you see between the slope-intercept form and the original sequence? -2 5 un = -2 + (n-1)(5)un = -2 + 5n – 5un = 5n – 7 1.4 Lines

  7. Connection between Arithmetic Sequences and Lines • Explicit Form: un = u1 + (n-1)(d) • Slope Intercept Form: y = mx + b • The slope corresponds to the common difference (m = d) • The y-intercept represents the value of u0, or the term before the sequence started, which is u1 less one common difference (u1 – d) 1.4 Lines

  8. Graphing a Line • Solve an equation for y (i.e. get y by itself) • Plot the y-intercept • Use the slope (rise over run) to make a 2nd plot • Draw a line which connects the two dots (a line, not a segment) • Graphing calculator • Graph→ F1, input in the equation, solved for y • 2nd, F5 1.4 Lines

  9. Assignment • Page 40 • Problems 3 – 14 (all problems) • Show your work 1.4 Lines

  10. 1.4 Lines(Day 2) Essential Question: How can you use the equations of two non-vertical lines to tell whether the lines are parallel or perpendicular?

  11. Point-Slope Form • Use point slope form when you’re given a point and a slope (SURPRISE!) or two points to determine an equation (and use those points to determine the slope) • y – y1 = m(x – x1) • Any point given can be used for (x1, y1) 1.4 Lines

  12. Point-Slope Form (Example 6) • Find the equation of the line that passes through the point (1, -6) with a slope 2. y – y1 = m(x – x1) y – (-6) = 2(x – 1) y + 6 = 2x – 2 – 6 – 6 y = 2x – 8 1.4 Lines

  13. Vertical and Horizontal Lines • Equation of a Horizontal Line • Every point along a horizontal line will have the same y value. • Written as y = b (where b is the y-intercept) • The slope of a horizontal line = 0 • Equation of a Vertical Line • Every point along a vertical line will have the same x value. • Written as x = c (where c is some constant) • The slope of a vertical line is undefined 1.4 Lines

  14. Parallel & Perpendicular Lines • Parallel lines have the same slope • Perpendicular lines have inverse reciprocal slopes • That means the product of the slopes of two perpendicular lines is -1 • Take the slope of one line, flip as a fraction and flip sign. 1.4 Lines

  15. Parallel & Perpendicular Lines (Example 9) • Given line M whose equation is 3x - 2y + 6=0, find the equation of the parallel and perpendicular lines which go through the point (2, -1) • Parallel Line • Get y by itself to findthe slope of line M • The slope of M is 3/2 • Use point-slope form y – y1 = m(x – x1) 3x – 2y + 6 = 0 y – (-1) = 3/2(x – 2) –3x –6 –3x – 6 -2y = -3x – 6 y + 1 = 3/2x – 3 -2 -2 -2 – 1 – 1 y = 3/2x + 3 y = 3/2x – 4

  16. Parallel & Perpendicular Lines (Example 9) • Given line M whose equation is 3x - 2y + 6=0, find the equation of the parallel and perpendicular lines which go through the point (2, -1) • Perpendicular Line • Slope of M = 3/2, so the perpendicular slope is -2/3 • Use point-slope form y – y1 = m(x – x1) y – (-1) = -2/3(x – 2) y + 1 = -2/3x + 4/3 – 1 – 1 y = -2/3x + 1/3

  17. Standard Form of a Line • Written as Ax + By = C, where A, B, and C are integers • We can convert our perpendicular line to standard form by removing any fractions 1.4 Lines

  18. Forms of Linear Equations • Standard Form: Ax + By = C • All integers, x and y terms on same side • Slope-Intercept Form: y = mx + b • Best for quickly identifying slope and graphing • Point-Slope Form: y – y1 = m(x – x1) • Best for writing equations • Horizontal Lines: y = b • Slope = 0 • Vertical Lines: x = c • Slope is undefined 1.4 Lines

  19. Assignment • Page 40 – 41 • Problems 17 – 49 (odd problems) • Show your work 1.4 Lines

More Related