TheWizardMe Posted October 21, 2005 Posted October 21, 2005 Hi all how is everyone hope good and fine i am new here but really a good forum which share very very big and important knowlegde a small problem face me in get a solution for the question: -if tangent line to the ellipse 9x^2 + 4y^2 = 36 has y intercept 6 find the equation of the tangent. the problem is when we substitute y by 6 and try to get a value for x the equation will be as follow x^2 = -12 the problem is there is no roots for a negative number otherwise we use an imaginry numbers hope anyone could help me to a get a solution for that question thanks in advance
Tom Mattson Posted October 21, 2005 Posted October 21, 2005 the problem is when we substitute y by 6 and try to get a value for x the equation (snip) You shouldn't be trying that at all. When the problem states that the y-intercept of the tangent line is at [imath](0' date='6)[/imath'], you are not being told that [imath]y=6[/imath] is in the range of the ellipse. You don't know where the tangent line intersects the ellipse, so call the point something like [imath](x_0,y_0)[/imath]. From there you can find the slope of the line in terms of the unknown point.
TheWizardMe Posted October 21, 2005 Author Posted October 21, 2005 thanks Mr. Tom for replying me but i wanna more disscus for it cause i didnt got U the question says that y intercept 6 so U mean that it intercept the line at (0,6) i think that this also means the f(x) which is y is equal 6 so i can subsititue y by 6 so PLZ Mr.Tom clarify it more cause i am confused about this question thanks in advance
Tom Mattson Posted October 25, 2005 Posted October 25, 2005 i think that this also means the f(x) which is y is equal 6 so i can subsititue y by 6 Certainly not. Look at the equation of the ellipse: [math]9x^2+4y^2=36[/math] Put it in standard form (do this by dividing by 36): [math]\frac{x^2}{4}+\frac{y^2}{9}=1[/math] [math]\frac{x^2}{2^2}+\frac{y^2}{3^2}=1[/math] As you can see from this equation' date=' the [b']highest[/b] point on the ellipse has a y-coordinate of 3. So y=6 is quite out of the question.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now