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Find the equation of the perpendicular bisector of a line segment whose end points are (-3,9) and (-1,5)

User Vic Smith
by
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:


y = (1)/(2) x + 3

Explanation:

Using the given points, first find the slope:

m = (₂ - y₁) / (x₂ - x₁)

= (5 - 9) / (-1 - (-3))

= -4 / 2

= -2

Find y-intercept by using anyone of the give points and slope from above:

y = mx + b

5 = -2(-1) + b

5 = 2 + b

b = 3

With the m and b, you can make equation of line:

y = mx + b

y = -2x + 3

To find the perpendicular slope, make it opposite and inverse it.

m = -2 becomes 1/2

Regular equation of line:

y = -2x + 3

Perpendicular equation of line:


y = (1)/(2) x + 3

User Nikita Leshchev
by
5.5k points
4 votes

First find the equation of y.


y=mx+n=(\Delta y)/(\Delta x)x+n

Find the slope m.


m=(5-9)/(-1-3)=(-4)/(-4)=1.

Pick one point, I'll pick (-3, 9). Insert coordinates in equation then compute n.


9=1(-3)+n\implies n=12.

The equation of a line y is:


y=x+12.

The perpendicular line
y_(\perp) is same like the normal line except its slope m becomes:


k=-(1)/(m)=-1.

The equation of a perpendicular bisector is thus:


y_(\perp)=-x+12.

Hope this helps.

User Milkersarac
by
5.9k points