the change in y over the change in x equals the slope(m) in the equation y=mx+b
the change in y over the change in x equals the slope(m) in the equation y=mx+b
if you meant y=0.45x +6.95 then 6.95 is the y-intercept this is a form of the equation y=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept this is only assuming there are the = and + sign where i put them
same thing. but its easy to change y=b+mx to y=mx+b
the rate of change is equal to the slope. the slope is found in the equation Y=mx+b, where m=slope and b=y-intercept (i.e. the value of y when x=0)
The standard form equation of a line is y=mx+b. M represents the slope; slope is the change in x over the change in y. B represents the y-intercept.
Slope = change in y/ change inx Slope is denoted as m in the following equationy=mx+b (called the y-intersept form)Where b is the y intercept, and x and y are the coordinatesTo solve for b, plug in the values for m, x, and y, and solve for b in the way you normally solve an algebraic equation
The equation of a line is y = mx + b. If the slope of the line (m) stays the same, the line will be parallel to the original line. What changing b does is change the y-intercept of the line, because when you make x = 0, y = b. So by making b larger, you are moving the line up the y axis.
things that cause pollution (ie noise, air, water)
It's the slope of the line, or your a or m depending on how your teachers teach it. y = mx + b where m = slope and b = y-intercept(or initial value) or y = mx + b where m = slope
If you mean when an equation or data set is graphed, then I can answer. For an equation to be linear (create a line on a graph) it must be in the y=mx+b format, with y being the y-value, x being the x-value, b being the y-intercept (the value of y when x is 0) and m being the constant rate of change, or slope (the change in y/the change in x).
If: A = Y+B Then: -Y = -A+B or Y = A-B