In the xy-plane, Region R consists of all the points (x,y) suc that 2x+3y = 6, Is the point (r,s) in the region R?
a) 3r+2s=6
b) r=3 ans s=2.
I beleive that the ans should be B. However it is E.
Can any one explain?
jnelson0612 Wrote:This is an ugly problem. Here's what I did:
1) First, take 2x + 3y <= 6, and convert it to the standard equation for a line, y=mx+b.
a) Subtract 2x from both sides
b) Divide both sides by 3
c) You obtain y <= -2/3x + 2
2) I then plotted that line on my graph. My y intercept is 2 and my x intercept is 3. I plotted out x=1, y=4/3 and x=2, y=2/3 by plugging them into the equation and just so I could see the line better. I shaded everything below this line--the line itself and the area below is Region R.
3) Start with statement 2. Not good enough, as you noted. I could have (3,2) which is outside the region or (0,0) which is inside the region. Insufficient.
4) Go to statement 1. Again, I can easily plug values that show this is insufficient; I can use (2,0) which is included in Region R or (0, 3) which is outside Region R. Insufficient.
5) I then combined both to try to disprove. I can easily use (3,0) which fits both statements and is on the line and thus included in Region R.
Now, I want something that fits both and is outside Region R. Let's play a bit. What if I say r=1? Then s must be 3/2 according to statement 1. If we look at our graph, (1, 3/2) is above the shaded line because the point at r=1 is (1, 4/3) and 3/2 is more than 4/3. Okay, I have proved insufficient. Whew!