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13 June, 01:49

For which values of p and q, will the following pair of linear equations have infinitely many

solutions?

4x + 5y = 2; (2p + 7q) x + (p + 8q) y = 2q - p + 1.

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Answers (1)
  1. 13 June, 02:11
    0
    In order to have infinitely many solutions with linear equations/functions, the two equations have to be the same;

    In accordance, we can say:

    (2p + 7q) x = 4x [1]

    (p + 8q) y = 5y [2]

    2q - p + 1 = 2 [3]

    All we have to do is choose two equations and solve them simultaneously (The simplest ones for what I'm doing and hence the ones I'm going to use are [3] and [2]):

    Rearrange in terms of p:

    p + 8q = 5 [2]

    p = 5 - 8q [2]

    p + 2 = 2q + 1 [3]

    p = 2q - 1 [3]

    Now equate rearranged [2] and [3] and solve for q:

    5 - 8q = 2q - 1

    10q = 6

    q = 6/10 = 3/5 = 0.6

    Now, substitute q-value into rearranges equations [2] or [3] to get p:

    p = 2 (3/5) - 1

    p = 6/5 - 1

    p = 1/5 = 0.2
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