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| Question 969467:  which of the following system of linear equation has an infinite number of solutions? please show work.
 a. 2x+5y=1, 6x+15y=3
 b. x+y=10, x-y=4
 c. x+y=10, x-y=16
 d. x-2y=8, 2x+7y=-16
 Answer by Boreal(15235)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! An infinite number of solutions means the same equation. A is correct.
 2x+5y=1   Multiply each term by 3, and you get 6x+15y=3, which is the other equation.
 The second one has a solution at x=7 and y=3.
 The third one has a solution at x=13 and y=-3
 The 4th one has a solution at x=8  y=0.
 What you look for are multiples.  In A, I see 2x and 6x  That is a multiple of 3.  Then I look at y.
 5y and 15 y, also multiple of 3.  Then I look across the equals sign  1 and 3.  This is the same equation.
 Be careful, however.  If the second were 6x=15y +3, this is not a multiple, because the x and y are on opposite sides of the equals sign.
 x+y=something
 x-y = something  Almost always have a solution.  Just add the x s and the y s disappear.
 
 2x + 5y=1
 6x+15y+3
 Multiply top equation by 3   3{2x+5y=1)    3 * 2x=6x   3(5y)=15y   3*1=3   We distribute the 3 over every term in the equation
 6x +15y=3
 6x +15y=3  (the bottom equation)
 Multiply the top equation by (-1).  This changes all the signs.
 -6x-15y=-3
 6x +15y =3   Now add
 0   + 0  = 0
 This means that any x, y pair will work.  Both of these equations describe the same line.   I hope that helps!
 I didn't show the solutions for the others, because the first one has an infinite number of solutions.  It can be shown that the others do not.
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