Welcome to Westonci.ca, the ultimate question and answer platform. Get expert answers to your questions quickly and accurately. Explore thousands of questions and answers from a knowledgeable community of experts ready to help you find solutions. Get precise and detailed answers to your questions from a knowledgeable community of experts on our Q&A platform.
Sagot :
-- On a graph, those equations produce two lines.
-- The lines are parallel because they have the same slope ( -1 ).
-- The y-intercept of one line is zero, so it goes through the origin.
-- The y-intercept of the other line is -4 , so it crosses the y-axis at 4 units
below the origin.
-- The two lines cross the y-axis at two points that are 4 units apart vertically,
so the two lines are 4 vertical units apart everywhere.
-- If you go through the same kind of argument, you discover that they're
also 4 horizontal units apart everywhere. I think this happens because
their slopes are ' 1 ', (alright, ' -1 '), and you would find that their x-intercepts
are also ' 1 ' and ' -1 '.
-- But if you want to get technical about it . . .
You simply asked for 'the distance'. I gave you the horizontal and vertical
distances between two sloping parallel lines. A good math teacher would throw
this out. The 'distance' between parallel lines is defined as the perpendicular
distance ... the length of a line that's perpendicular to both of them.
The first method that pops into my mind goes like this:
-- The slope of these two parallel lines is -1 , so the slope of a line that's
perpendicular to them is +1 .
-- Let's look at the line that's perpendicular to them and passes through
the origin. Its equation is Y = X , and it hits one of the parallel lines there
at the origin.
-- Where does it hit the other parallel line ? Well, that line is y = -x-4 ,
and we want the point where y=x intersects it. So x = -x - 4 .
Add 'x' to each side: 2x = -4 . Divide each side by 2: x = -2 .
The point is (-2, -2) .
-- What's the length of the line between the two parallel lines that's
perpendicular to them ? We know 2 points on it . . . (0, 0) and (-2,-2) .
The distance between those points is . . .
√ [ (-2-0)² + (-2-0)² ] = √(4+4) = √8 = ( √4 ) ( √2 ) = 2 √2 .
That's about 2.8284... , and that's the real distance between those
two parallel lines.
We hope this information was helpful. Feel free to return anytime for more answers to your questions and concerns. We hope you found what you were looking for. Feel free to revisit us for more answers and updated information. We're glad you visited Westonci.ca. Return anytime for updated answers from our knowledgeable team.