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2 votes
Ophelia was asked whether the following equation is an identity:

2(x-3)(4x-1)=(4x-6)^2-4(6+x)2(x−3)(4x−1)=(4x−6)
2
−4(6+x)2, left parenthesis, x, minus, 3, right parenthesis, left parenthesis, 4, x, minus, 1, right parenthesis, equals, left parenthesis, 4, x, minus, 6, right parenthesis, squared, minus, 4, left parenthesis, 6, plus, x, right parenthesis
She performed the following steps:
\begin{aligned} &\phantom{=}2(x-3)(4x-1) \\\\ \xhookrightarrow{\text{Step }1}\quad&=(2x-6)(8x-2) \\\\ \xhookrightarrow{\text{Step }2}\quad&=16x^2-4x-48x+12 \\\\ \xhookrightarrow{\text{Step }3}\quad&=16x^2-48x+36-24-4x \\\\ \xhookrightarrow{\text{Step }4}\quad&=(4x-6)^2-4(6+x) \end{aligned}
Step 1


Step 2


Step 3


Step 4




=2(x−3)(4x−1)
=(2x−6)(8x−2)
=16x
2
−4x−48x+12
=16x
2
−48x+36−24−4x
=(4x−6)
2
−4(6+x)


For this reason, Ophelia stated that the equation is a true identity.
Is Ophelia correct? If not, in which step did she make a mistake?
Choose 1 answer:
Choose 1 answer:

(Choice A)
A
Ophelia is correct.

(Choice B)
B
Ophelia is incorrect. She made a mistake in step 111.

(Choice C)
C
Ophelia is incorrect. She made a mistake in step 333.

(Choice D)
D
Ophelia is incorrect. She made a mistake in step 444.

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

Step 1 is incorrect

Explanation:

Kahn Academy

User Easeout
by
3.4k points
0 votes

Answer:

B

Explanation:

the answer is B she didn't set up correctly.

User Michael Easter
by
3.0k points