No, thank you.
Press Y= to see the equations. Enter and equation in, using x as the variable. (Press X,T,θ,n for an x.) Enter an equation and press GRAPH to see it. (If you need to graph parametric, polar, or sequential equations, press MODE and select the graph type you need. Select FUNC for normal y= equations.)
You graph each of them separately, on the same coordinate plane.
Yes.
That will depend on what equations but in general if it has a slope of -3 then it will have a down hill slope
Graph both equations on the same graph. Where they intersect is the solution to the system of equations
You can use a graph to solve systems of equations by plotting the two equations to see where they intersect
One can solve equations of motion by graph by taking readings of the point of interception.
In linear equations, the multiple of the x-term dictates the gradient of the graph when plotted. Thus y=3x has a gradient (or slope) of 3. As it is the "multiple" of the x-term, "m" seems a sensible letter to use.
No, thank you.
A continuous graph that shows change over time.
Equations = the method
The statement - The graph of a system of equations with the same slope and the same y intercepts will have no solution is True
Another mathematical name for chart is table, diagram or graph.
Press Y= to see the equations. Enter and equation in, using x as the variable. (Press X,T,θ,n for an x.) Enter an equation and press GRAPH to see it. (If you need to graph parametric, polar, or sequential equations, press MODE and select the graph type you need. Select FUNC for normal y= equations.)
You graph each of them separately, on the same coordinate plane.
The statement "A system of linear equations is a set of two or more equations with the same variables and the graph of each equation is a line" is true.