1 / 17

Precalculus Day #5

Precalculus Day #5. Mr. Ueland 1 st Period Rm 162. Today in Precalculus. Announcements Prayer Correct Assignment #3 [P.3, pp28-30, 1-9 odd, 21-33 odd, 37,41,49,55,66,72,73] “New” material: “Lines in the Plane”. 55. Equations and tables. 55. x 2 – 2x < 0.

Download Presentation

Precalculus Day #5

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. Precalculus Day #5 Mr. Ueland 1st Period Rm162

  2. Today in Precalculus • Announcements • Prayer • Correct Assignment #3 [P.3, pp28-30, 1-9 odd, 21-33 odd, 37,41,49,55,66,72,73] • “New” material: “Lines in the Plane”

  3. 55.Equations and tables 55. x2 – 2x < 0 Enter as an equation using F1 View as a table using <2nd> F5 Scanning the table we notice that the only value of x that yields a negative y is x = 1

  4. Review • Which of the following equations is equivalent to –3x < 6? • 3x < –6 • x < 10 • x > –2 • x > 2 • x > 3

  5. Review • Which of the following equations is the solution to the equation x(x+1) = 0? • x = 0 or x = –1 • x = 0 or x = 1 • only x = –1 • only x = 0 • only x = 1

  6. Review[What they’re working on next door] • Which of the following equations is the solution to the equation –3x ≥ 0? • x = 0 • x ≥ 0 • x ≤ 0 • x ≤ –⅓ • x is indeterminate (cannot be determined) Things get weird if you multiply both sides by zero, but not so much if you multiply zero on one side

  7. P.3: Lines in the Plane Definitions • The slope of a nonvertical line through the points (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) is • A vertical line has no slope. • A horizontal line has zero slope “rise over run” Why? Zero in the denominator is undefined

  8. The Many Forms of Equations of a Line • General form: • Point-slope form: A and B cannot BOTH be 0

  9. Forms of Equations of a Line (cont). • Point-slope form: • 2-Point form:

  10. Example 2 • Find the equation of the line with slope 2 and passing through point (–3,–4)

  11. Parallel and Perpendicular Lines • Two nonvertical lines are parallelif and only if (iff) their slopes are equal. • Two nonvertical lines are perpendicular iff their slopesm1 and m2 are opposite reciprocals:

  12. Example 6 • Find the equation of the line through P(2,–3) that is perpendicular to the line L with equation 4x + y = 3. Find the slope from the definition of a perp. line Use point-slope form

  13. Example 6 (cont.)

  14. Example 7Applications: Everybody’s favorite! Camelot Apartments purchased a $50,000 building [either this book is old or a double-dip recession is coming] and depreciates it $2000 per year over a 25-year period. Write a linear equation giving the value y of the building in terms of the years x after the purchase. In how many years will the value of the building be $24,500?

  15. Example 7 (cont.) This is a linear equation! Let y equal the value of the building, let the slope be the change of value (i.e. depreciation) and let b be the initial value (value today) NOTE: slope is negative. Why? That is your answer to part a)

  16. Example 7 (cont.) We’ll use are answer to part a) to find an answer for part b), the number of years (x) when the value of the building (y) is $24,500.

  17. Assignment 4 • P.4, pp 40-43, 1-7 odd, 11-25 odd, 37,41,45 (each part one problem), 48 • Due Monday at the start of class

More Related