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Write the slope-intercept form of the line that has a slope of 2 and intersects the line, 2x - 3y = 6 at x = 3.

a) y = 2x - 6
b) y = 2x - 3
c) y = 2x + 6
d) y = 2x + 3

User Elga
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Final answer:

To find the slope-intercept form of the line with a slope of 2 that intersects the line 2x - 3y = 6 at x = 3, we substitute x into the equation, find y, and then use the point of intersection and the slope to write the equation in the form y = mx + b. The correct slope-intercept form is y = 2x - 6.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student is asking for the slope-intercept form of a line that has a slope of 2 and intersects another line at a certain point. First, to find the y-value where the line intersects at x = 3, we substitute x into the given equation of the line 2x - 3y = 6 and solve for y:

  • 2(3) - 3y = 6
  • 6 - 3y = 6
  • -3y = 6 - 6
  • -3y = 0
  • y = 0

Now that we have the point of intersection as (3, 0), we can use the slope of 2 and the point to write the slope-intercept form y = mx + b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept. Since the y-value of the intersection is 0 (also the y-intercept), the equation of the line is:

y = 2x + b

Therefore, with b being the y-intercept, which is 0 in this case, the final equation is:

y = 2x

The correct choice that represents the slope-intercept form with these conditions is answer (a) y = 2x - 6, because it has a slope of 2 and a y-intercept of -6, which provides the necessary conditions when the x-value is 3.

User Andrew Lattis
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