Transcript Slide 1
Math 021
An equation is defined as two algebraic expressions
separated by an = sign.
The solution to an equation is a number that when
substituted into the equation makes it a true
statement.
For example, 8 is a solution to the equation x2 – 9x = -8 since
when x = 8 the equation becomes:
82 – 9(8) = -8
64 – 72 = -8
-8 = -8
which is a true statement
However, 2 is not a solution since:
22 – 9(2) = -8
4 – 18 = -8
-14 = -8
which is a false statement
A
linear equation in one
variable is any equation which
contains a single variable and
that variable is raised to the
first power.
The general form of a linear
equation in one variable is ax +
b = c where a, b, and c are real
numbers.
Let a, b, c be real numbers. If a = b, then a + c = b +
c. The addition property allows you to add or subtract
any term from both sides of an equation and the
equation will remain equal.
Examples – Solve the following using the addition
property:
a. x + 3 = 7 + 8
b. 5x = 16 + 4x
c. 7x - 5 = 8x + 10
d. 10x – 5x = 4x – 11
e. 2(x + 6) = x – 3
f. 3(4x – 11) = -11(3 – x)
Let
a, b, c be real numbers, If a = b, then
a∙c = b∙c. The multiplication property allows
you to multiply or divide any non-zero
number to both sides of an equation and the
equation will remain equal.
Examples – Solve the following using the
multiplication property:
a. 7x = 35
b. 5x + 6x = 39 + 5
c. -16(1-x) – 14x = –10
d. 5x – 4 = 26 + 2x
e. 8x – 5x + 3 = x – 7 + 10
f. -2(5x – 1) – x = -4(x – 3)
Multiply
by a LCD to eliminate any fractions
or multiply by a power of 10 to eliminate
decimals
Use the distributive property if necessary
Combine like terms on the same side of the
equal sign
Use the addition property to isolate the term
containing the variable on one side of the
equation and the real number to the other
Solve for the variable by using the
multiplication property
Examples
a.
– Solve each of the following:
2
b.
2
7 11
5
x
4
7
5
c. 1 x 2 1 x 1
2
3
6
12
d.
x
5( x 1)
4
30
15
= 3( x 1)
2
e.
0.5x – 0.3 = 1.1 + 0.3x
f. 0.15(4 – x) = 0.13(2 – x)
A
contradiction is a statement in
mathematics that when completely
simplified is false. A linear equation that
simplifies to a contradiction has no solution.
An
identity is a statement in mathematics
that when completely simplified is always
true. A linear equation that simplifies to an
identity has an infinite number of solutions,
or all real numbers.
a.
5x – 6x – 3 = -(x + 3)
b.
3x + 3 + 5 = 2x + 2 + x
c.
9(x – 2) = 7(x – 10) + 2x
d.
5(x – 4) + x = 6(x – 2) – 8
An absolute value equation is any equation
that contains one or more absolute values.
To eliminate absolute values, use the
definition that if |x| = c, then x = c or x = -c
Examples – Solve each of the following:
a. |x + 3| = 7
b. |x + 3| – 4 = 7
c.
e.
|2x – 5| + 1 = 6
|3x + 1| + 10 = 6
d. 3|5 – x| – 1 = 8
f. |2x| = -15