Westonci.ca is the Q&A platform that connects you with experts who provide accurate and detailed answers. Experience the ease of finding quick and accurate answers to your questions from professionals on our platform. Connect with a community of professionals ready to help you find accurate solutions to your questions quickly and efficiently.

Explain why the equation is not linear.

5/x - y = 1

A. x Should be an exponent.

B. The x variable appears in the denominator.

C. The coefficient of both variables must be equal.

D. There should be an exponent of 2 on either x or y.​


Sagot :

Answer:

B. The x variable appears in the denominator.

Step-by-step explanation:

Given

[tex]\frac{5}{x} - y = 1[/tex]

Required

What makes it not linear

First, make y the subject

[tex]y = \frac{5}{x}+1[/tex]

A linear equation is represented as:

[tex]y = mx + b[/tex]

Notice that the exponent of x in the general form is: 1

This means that x has to appear as a numerator

In [tex]y = \frac{5}{x}+1[/tex], the exponent of x is -1

This means that x has to appear as a denominator

Hence, (b) is true