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3 votes
Find the distance from the origin to the graph of 7x+9y+11=0

2 Answers

3 votes
One way to do it is with calculus. The distance between any point
(x,y)=\left(x,-\frac{7x+11}9\right) on the line to the origin is given by


d(x)=\sqrt{x^2+\left(-\frac{7x+11}9\right)^2}=\frac{√(130x^2+154x+121)}9

Now, both
d(x) and
d(x)^2 attain their respective extrema at the same critical points, so we can work with the latter and apply the derivative test to that.


d(x)^2=(130x^2+154x+121)/(81)\implies(\mathrm dd(x)^2)/(\mathrm dx)=(260)/(81)x+(154)/(81)

Solving for
(d(x)^2)'=0, you find a critical point of
x=-(77)/(130).

Next, check the concavity of the squared distance to verify that a minimum occurs at this value. If the second derivative is positive, then the critical point is the site of a minimum.

You have


(\mathrm d^2d(x)^2)/(\mathrm dx^2)=(260)/(81)>0

so indeed, a minimum occurs at
x=-(77)/(130).

The minimum distance is then


d\left(-(77)/(130)\right)=(11)/(√(130))
User Sumitya
by
7.5k points
4 votes

Answer: A, roughly 0.96

Explanation:

Edge

User PizzaEatingGuy
by
6.8k points
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