Answer:
.
Explanation:
If the slope of a line in a plane is
and the
-intercept of that line is
, the slope-intercept equation of that line would be
.
Rearrange the equation of the given line
in the slope-intercept form to find the slope of this line:
.
.
.
Notice that in the slope-intercept equation of this given line, the coefficient of
is
. Thus, the slope of the given line would be
.
Two lines in a plane are perpendicular to one another if the product of their slopes is
. In other words, if
and
are the slopes of two lines perpendicular to each other, then
.
Since
for the given line, the slope of the line perpendicular to this given line would be:
.
If the slope of a line in a plane is
, and that line goes through the point
, the equation of that line in point-slope form would be:
.
The slope of the line in question is
. It is given that this line goes through the point
, where
and
. Thus, the equation of this line in point-slope form would be:
.
.
.
Rearrange this equation to match the format of the choices:
.
.
.