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10 votes
10 votes
How do I find the distance formula A(-7,10) + B(-11,4)

User Ethan Heilman
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1 Answer

14 votes
14 votes

We can use the distance formula to find the distance between A and B.

Given,


\begin{gathered} (x_1,y_1)=(-7,10) \\ (x_2,y_2)=(-11,4) \end{gathered}

The distance formula is


D=\sqrt[]{(y_2-y_1)^2+(x_2-x_1)^2}

Substituting in the respective points and simplifying, we can find the distance:


\begin{gathered} D=\sqrt[]{(y_2-y_1)^2+(x_2-x_1)^2} \\ D=\sqrt[]{(4-10_{})^2+(-11-(-7))^2} \\ D=\sqrt[]{(-6)^2+(-4)^2} \\ D=\sqrt[]{36+16} \\ D=\sqrt[]{52} \\ D=\sqrt[]{4\cdot13} \\ D=\sqrt[]{4}\sqrt[]{13} \\ D=2\sqrt[]{13} \end{gathered}

**Note

The radical property used to simplify the last steps are:


\sqrt[]{ab}=\sqrt[]{a}\sqrt[]{b}

Answer
2\sqrt[]{13}

User DarkSquid
by
2.8k points