Help please. Fan and medal. Algebra 2
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Log the coordinates of the specific points in space to which your spacecraft will travel. Please remember to include the graph of your points and the lines connecting each point along with your work. Launch Area:___(1, 2)___ Point A:__________ Point B:__________ Point C:__________ Send your selected points and graph to your partner. They will send you their points and graph. Using your partner’s selected points, create the following equations. Work must be shown on each question below. Determine the equation of the line, in standard form, that will get your spacecraft from the Launch Area to Point A. Determine the equation of the line, in point-slope form, that will get your spacecraft from Point A to Point B. Determine the equation of the line, in slope-intercept form, that will get your spacecraft from Point B to Point C. In question 2, you selected one of two points (Point A or Point B) to be included in your point-slope equation. Write the point-slope form of that equation again, using the other point’s coordinates. Convert the equations you arrived at in question 2 and question 4 into slope-intercept form. Does the point you select matter when you write a point-slope equation? Explain your reasoning using complete sentences. Discuss these two questions with your partner. Reflect back on this scenario and each equation you and your partner created. Would any restrictions apply to the domain and range of those equations? Explain your reasoning using complete sentences. Explain, using complete sentences, why it is important to understand any limitations on the domain and range.
I need help with 4
Is this question 4? Determine the equation of the line, in slope-intercept form, that will get your spacecraft from Point B to Point C.
wrong questions Im sorry
Determine the equation of the line, in standard form, that will get your spacecraft from the Launch Area to Point A. Determine the equation of the line, in point-slope form, that will get your spacecraft from Point A to Point B. Determine the equation of the line, in slope-intercept form, that will get your spacecraft from Point B to Point C. Convert the equations you arrived at in question 2 into slope-intercept form. Make sure to include all of your work. Reflect back on this scenario and each equation you created. Would any restrictions apply to the domain and range of those equations? Explain your reasoning using complete sentences.
thats question 4
Launch Area:___(1, 2)___ Point A:___(0, 3)___ Point B:___(-3, 0)___ Point C:___(-1, -4)_
those are the points
Ok good deal. So you're finding the slope intercept form. Check this video out. It'll show you how to find the slope intercept form. It'll be much easier than showing you how to do it. https://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/linear-equations-and-inequalitie/equation-of-a-line/v/equation-of-a-line-3 You're going to use your points to find the slope. The first question you'd use (1,2) and (0,3). For question 2 you'd use point A and point B and so on. If you still have questions after watching that video, let me know. But I think the video will explain it much better.
for question 4 I got y=-2x-6
question 3 I mean
Hmm, I was getting something different. for Determine the equation of the line, in standard form, that will get your spacecraft from the Launch Area to Point A. I got y=1x+2 And y=1x+3 for Determine the equation of the line, in point-slope form, that will get your spacecraft from Point A to Point B.
How did you do it?
How did you get that? I found the slope of the 2 coordinates I plugged them into the formula
\[\frac{ 3-2 }{ 0-1 }=-1\]so \[y=-1x+b\]\[2=-1(1)+b\]solve for b in the previous equation and you can plug that in for b.
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