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Chapter1v2 3

1) When two lines are parallel in a system of two linear equations, they have no point of intersection and the system has no solution. 2) A system of linear equations can have exactly one solution, infinitely many solutions, or no solution. 3) The main problem is to find the solution(s) to a system of linear equations given by the matrix A for different values of b. The first question that arises is what condition b must satisfy for a solution to exist.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views

Chapter1v2 3

1) When two lines are parallel in a system of two linear equations, they have no point of intersection and the system has no solution. 2) A system of linear equations can have exactly one solution, infinitely many solutions, or no solution. 3) The main problem is to find the solution(s) to a system of linear equations given by the matrix A for different values of b. The first question that arises is what condition b must satisfy for a solution to exist.

Uploaded by

Adnan
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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3.

In the third case, when the two lines are parallel, they do not have any
point of intersection, and hence the system has NO solution

Thus, in general, a system of two linear equations in two unknowns may have
exactly one solution, or an infinite number of solutions, or may not have any
solution at all.
We would be, in general, interested in considering m equations in n un-
knowns, which is written in the form

a11 x1 + a12 x2 + ··· + a1j xj + ··· + a1n xn = b1 

··· ···

a21 x1 + a22 x2 + + a2j xj + + a2n xn = b2 



··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ···


(1.1.5)
ai1 x1 + ai2 x2 + ··· + aij xj + ··· + ain xn = bi 


··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ··· ···





am1 x1 + am2 x2 + ··· + amj xj + ··· + amn xn = bm

In the above system, x1 , x2 , · · · , xn are the n unknowns to be determined. In


the coefficients aij , the first index i refers to the equation number and the
second index j refers to the unknown whose coefficient is aij . Thus a34 refers
to the fact that it is the coefficient of the unknown x4 in the 3rd equation.
Note that the aij and bj are known and we have to determine the xj . We
write this in matrix notation as

Ax = b (1.1.6)

where A is the m × n matrix A = (aij )m×n , b is the m × 1 column vector


b = (bi )m×1 and x is the n × 1 column vector x = (xj )n×1 .
Our main problem is the following:
Main Problem:
Given the matrix A find the solution(s) of the system for different
b.
Since we have already seen that we may have situations where the system
may not have any solution, the first fundamental question that arises is the
following:
First Question
What is the condition that b should satisfy in order that there
exists a solution to the system Ax = b ?
Any such condition(s) is called Consistency Condition, and we shall de-
note these by [C]. So, given a b the first question that we have to ask is the

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