Yes, you can determine the nature of a system of two linear equations by analyzing their slopes and intercepts. If the lines represented by the equations have different slopes, the system has one solution (they intersect at a single point). If the lines have the same slope but different intercepts, there is no solution (the lines are parallel). If the lines have the same slope and the same intercept, there are infinitely many solutions (the lines coincide).
there is no linear equations that has no solution every problem has a solution
A system of equations will intersect at exactly one point if the equations represent two lines that are neither parallel nor coincident, meaning they have different slopes. In this case, there is a unique solution to the system. If the lines are parallel, they will not intersect at all, and if they are coincident, they will intersect at infinitely many points.
A system of equations may have any amount of solutions. If the equations are linear, the system will have either no solution, one solution, or an infinite number of solutions. If the equations are linear AND there are as many equations as variables, AND they are independent, the system will have exactly one solution.
The intersection of a system of equations represents the set of values that satisfy all equations simultaneously, indicating a solution to the system. If there is no intersection, it suggests that the equations are inconsistent, meaning there is no set of values that can satisfy all equations at the same time. This can occur when the lines or curves representing the equations are parallel or when they diverge in different directions. In such cases, the system has no solution.
The slopes (gradients) of the two equations are different.
If the equations or inequalities have the same slope, they have no solution or infinite solutions. If the equations/inequalities have different slopes, the system has only one solution.
The graph of a system of equations with the same slope will have no solution, unless they have the same y intercept, which would give them infinitely many solutions. Different slopes means that there is one solution.
No the only time that a system of equations would have no solutions is when the two equations have the same slope but different y-intercepts which would mean that they are parallel lines. However, if they have different slopes and different y-intercepts than the solution would be where the two lines intersect.
The question makes little general sense because the concept of slopes is appropriate when dealing with equations in only two variables.Assuming, therefore, that there are only two variables, then either the slopes are the same or they are different,If the slopes are the same and the intercepts are the same: there are infinitely many solutionsIf the slopes are the same and the intercepts are different: there are no solutionsIf the slopes are different: there is a unique solution.
there is no linear equations that has no solution every problem has a solution
A system of equations with exactly one solution intersects at a singular point, and none of the equations in the system (if lines) are parallel.
A system of equations may have any amount of solutions. If the equations are linear, the system will have either no solution, one solution, or an infinite number of solutions. If the equations are linear AND there are as many equations as variables, AND they are independent, the system will have exactly one solution.
The solution of a system of linear equations is a pair of values that make both of the equations true.
A system of equations will have no solutions if the line they represent are parallel. Remember that the solution of a system of equations is physically represented by the intersection point of the two lines. If the lines don't intersect (parallel) then there can be no solution.
Solve both equations for y, that is, write them in the form y = ax + b. "a" is the slope in this case. Since the two lines have different slopes, when you graph them they will intersect in exactly one point - therefore, there is one solution.
It is not possible to tell. The lines could intersect, in pairs, at several different points giving no solution. A much less likely outcome is that they all intersect at a single point: the unique solution to the system.