ghong14 Wrote:X^2=Y^2 is it true that X>0??
1) x=2Y+1
2)y<=-1
Hi this is a GMAT prep problem that popped up. I need some help with picking numbers on this one? What are two numbers that I can pick to show that statement one is insufficient. I have picked x=-1 and Y=-1 to show that X>0 is not true. But can't seem to find a pair that will prove X>0 and X=2Y+1. In addition why is that we need the second statement for this to be sufficient?
you're not going to be readily able to pick numbers for statement 1, because statement 1 is two simultaneous equations: x^2 = y^2 (from the prompt) and x = 2y + 1.
the thing that you should know here, though, is that "x^2 = y^2" implies either that x and y are the same (x = y) or else that they are opposites (x = -y, or y = -x).
if you don't see why this is the case, just fish around for two numbers that you can square to get the same value, and you should see what's going on pretty quickly.
so, just write each of these cases, substitute into x = 2y + 1, and solve.
if y = x:
x = 2y + 1
x = 2x + 1
x = -1
in this case, x = y, so y = -1.
if y = -x:
x = 2y + 1
x = -2x + 1
3x = 1
x = 1/3
in this case, y = -x, so y = -1/3.
so, there are two cases that satisfy statement 1 (and, of course, the prompt): (x, y) = (-1, -1) and (x, y) = (1/3, -1/3).
so, statement 1 is not sufficient, since one of these x-values is positive and the other is negative.
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that brings us to trying the two statements together. if we bring statement 2 into the mix, then only the pair (x, y) = (-1, -1) survives. in that case, you have concrete values for both x and y, so definitely sufficient.
answer should be (c).