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Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 1
Systems of Equations
and Matrices
Chapter 8
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
8.1
Systems of Equations in
Two Variables

Solve a system of two linear equations in two variables
by graphing.

Solve a system of two linear equations in two variables
using the substitution and the elimination methods.

Use systems of two linear equations to solve applied
problems.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Systems of Equations

A system of equations is composed of two or more
equations considered simultaneously.
Example: 5x  y = 5
4x  y = 3
This is a system of two linear equations in two
variables. The solution set of this system consists of
all ordered pairs that make both equations true. The
ordered pair (2, 5) is a solution of this system.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 4
Solving Systems of Equations
Graphically

When we graph a system of
linear equations, each point at
which the equations intersect
is a solution of both equations
and therefore a solution of
the system of equations.

Let’s solve the previous
system graphically.
5x  y = 5
4x  y = 3
Solution:
We see that the graph
intersects at the single point
(2, 5), so this is the solution
of the system of equations.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 5
Systems of Equations

If a system of equations has at least one solution, it is
consistent. If the system has no solutions, it is
inconsistent.

If a system of two linear equations in two variables has
an infinite number of solutions, the equations are
dependent. Otherwise, they are independent.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 6
Illustration of Graphs
Graphs of linear equations may be related to each other
in one of three ways.
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Slide 5- 7
Substitution Method
The substitution method is a technique that gives
accurate results when solving systems of equations. It
is most often used when a variable is alone on one side
of an equation or when it is easy to solve for a variable.
One equation is used to express one variable in terms
of the other, then it is substituted in the other equation.
Example: Let’s use this method to solve the previous
system.
5x  y = 5
4x  y = 3
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Slide 5- 8
Solution
Solve the first equation for y.
5x  y = 5
y = 5x  5
Then we substitute 5x  5 for
y in the second equation to
give an equation in one
variable.
4x  (5x  5) = 3
4x  5x + 5 = 3
x=2
Now we use back-substitution
and substitute 2 for x in either
original equation.
4x  y = 3
4(2)  y = 3
8y=3
y=5
We find the solution to the
system of equations to be (2, 5),
once again.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 9
Elimination Method
Using the elimination method, we eliminate one
variable by adding the two equations. If the coefficients
of a variable are opposites, that variable can be
eliminated by simply adding the original equations.
If the coefficients are not opposites, it is necessary to
multiply one or both equations by suitable constants,
before we add.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 10
Example
Solve the system using the elimination method.
6x + 2y = 4
10x + 7y =  8
If we multiply the first equation by 5 and the second equation
by 3, we will be able to eliminate the x variable.
30x + 10y = 20
30x  21y = 24
11y = 44
y = 4
Substituting:
6x + 2y = 4
6x + 2(4) = 4
6x  8 = 4
6x = 12
The solution is (2,  4).
x=2
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Slide 5- 11
More Examples
Solve the system.
x  3y = 9 (1)
2x  6y = 3
(2)
Solve the system.
9x + 6y = 48 (1)
3x + 2y = 16 (2)
Solution:
2x + 6y = 18
2x  6y = 3
0 = 21
Solution:
9x + 6y = 48
9x  6y = 48
0=0
Mult. (1) by 2
There are no values of x and y
in which 0 = 21. So this system
has no solution. The graphs
of the equations are of parallel
lines.
Mult. (2) by 3
When we obtain the equation
0 = 0, we know the equations are
dependent. There are infinitely
many solutions. The graphs of
the equations are identical.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 12
Application
Ethan and Ian are twins. They have decided to save all
of the money they earn, at their part-time jobs, to buy a
car to share at college. One week, Ethan worked 8
hours and Ian worked 14 hours. Together they saved
$256. The next week, Ethan worked 12 hours and Ian
worked 16 hours and they earned $324. How much
does each twin make per hour?
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 13
Solution
Letting E represent Ethan and I represent Ian, the following
system can be obtained.
8E + 14I = 256
12E + 16I = 324
Mult by 12
Mult by 8
96E + 168I = 3072
96E  128I = 2592
40I = 480
I = 12
Solve for E.
8E + 14(12) = 256
8E = 88
E = 11
Ian makes $12 per hour while Ethan makes $11 per hour.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 14
Graphical Solution

y1 = 128  4 x
7
7
and y2 = 81  3x
4
4
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Slide 5- 15
8.2
Systems of Equations in
Variables
Three

Solve systems of linear equations in three variables.

Use systems of three equations to solve applied
problems.

Model a situation using a quadratic function.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Solving Systems of Equations in
Three Variables

A linear equation in three variables is an equation equivalent to
one of the form Ax + By + Cz = D.
 A, B, C, and D are real numbers and A, B, and C are not all 0.

A solution of a system of three equations in three variables is
an ordered triple that makes all three equations true.
Example: The triple (4, 0, 3) is the solution of this system of
equations. We can verify this by substituting 4 for x, 0 for y, and
3 for z in each equation.
x  2y + 4z = 8
2x + 2y  z = 11
x + y  2z = 10
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Slide 5- 17
Gaussian Elimination
An algebraic method used to solve systems in three
variables.
 The original system is transformed to an equivalent one
of the form:
Ax + By + Cz = D,
Ey + Fz = G,
Hz = K.
Then the third equation is solved for z and backsubstitution is used to find y and then x.

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Slide 5- 18
Operations
The following operations can be used to transform the
original system to an equivalent system in the desired
form.



Interchange any two equations.
Multiply both sides of one of the equations by a
nonzero constant.
Add a nonzero multiple of one equation to another
equation.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 19
Example
x + 3y + 2z = 9
x  y + 3z = 16
3x  4y + 2z = 28
Solution: Choose 1 variable to eliminate
using 2 different pairs of equations. Let’s
eliminate x from equations (2) and (3).
x  3y  2z = 9
x  y + 3z = 16
4y + z = 7
Mult. (1) by 1
(2)
(4)
3x  9y  6z = 27
3x  4y + 2z = 28
13y  4z = 1
Mult. (1) by 3
(3)
(5)
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Slide 5- 20
Example continued
Now we have…
x + 3y + 2z = 9
4y + z = 7
13y  4z = 1
(1)
(4)
(5)
Next, we multiply equation (4) by 4 to make the z coefficient a
multiple of the z coefficient in the equation below it.
x + 3y + 2z = 9
(1)
16y + 4z = 28 (6)
13y  4z = 1
(5)
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Slide 5- 21
Example continued
Now, we add equations 5 and 6.
13y  4z = 1
(5)
16y + 4z = 28
(6)
29y = 29
Now, we have the system of equations:
x + 3y + 2z = 9
(1)
13y  4z = 1
(5)
29y = 29
(7)
Next, we solve equation (7) for y:
29y = 29
y = 1
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Slide 5- 22
Example continued
Then, we back-substitute 1 in equation (5) and solve for z.
13(1)  4z = 1
13  4z = 1
4z = 12
z=3
Finally, we substitute 1 for y and 3 for z in equation (1) and solve
for x:
x + 3(1) + 2(3) = 9
x3+6=9
x=6

The triple (6, 1, 3) is the solution of this system.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 23
Graphs

The graph of a linear equation in three variables is a plane. Thus
the solution set of such a system is the intersection of three planes.
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Slide 5- 24
Application
A food service distributor conducted a study to predict
fuel usage for new delivery routes, for a particular truck.
Use the chart to find the rates of fuel in rush hour traffic,
city traffic, and on the highway.
Rush Hour
Hours
City Traffic
Hours
Highway
Hours
Total Fuel
Used (gal)
Week 1
2
9
3
15
Week 2
7
8
3
24
Week 3
6
18
6
34
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 25
Solution

Familiarize. We let x, y, and z represent the hours in rush hour
traffic, city traffic, and highway, respectively.

Translate. We have three equations:
2x + 9y + 3z = 15
(1)
7x + 8y + 3z = 24
(2)
6x + 18y + 6z = 34
(3)

Carry Out. We will solve this equation by eliminating z from
equations (2) and (3).
2x  9y  3z = 15 Mult. (1) by 1
7x + 8y + 3z = 24
(2)
5x  y = 9
(4)
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Slide 5- 26
Solution continued
Next, we can solve for x:
4x  18y  6z = 30 Mult. (1) by 2
6x + 18y + 6z = 34
(3)
2x = 4
x=2
Next, we can solve for y by substituting 2 for x in equation (4):
5(2)  y = 9
y=1
Finally, we can substitute 2 for x and 1 for y in equation (1) to solve for z:
2(2) + 9(1) + 3z = 15
4 + 9 + 3z = 15
2
z= 3
2
Solving the system we get (2, 1, 3 ).
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Slide 5- 27
Solution continued
2
Check: Substituting 2 for x, 1 for y, and 3 for z, we see that the
solution makes each of the three equations true.
State: In rush hour traffic the distribution truck uses fuel at a rate of
2 gallons per hour. In city traffic, the same truck uses 1 gallon of
fuel per hour. In highway traffic, the same truck used 2 gallon of
3
fuel per hour.
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Slide 5- 28
8.3
Matrices and Systems of
Equations

Solve systems of equations using matrices.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Matrices

A rectangular array of numbers is called a matrix
(plural, matrices).
Example:  4 2 3
1 5 4 



The matrix shown above is an augmented matrix
because it contains not only the coefficients but also the
constant terms.
The matrix 4 2 is called the coefficient matrix.

1 5 


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Slide 5- 30
Matrices continued



The rows of a matrix are horizontal.
The columns of a matrix are vertical.
The matrix shown has 2 rows and 3 columns.
1 2 3
4 5 6




A matrix with m rows and n columns is said to be of
order m  n.
When m = n the matrix is said to be square.
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Slide 5- 31
Gaussian Elimination with Matrices

Row-Equivalent Operations
1. Interchange any two rows.
2.
Multiply each entry in a row by the same nonzero
constant.
3.
Add a nonzero multiple of one row to another
row.
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Slide 5- 32
Example
Solve the following system:
2x  y  z  8
x  3 y  2 z  1
4x
 5 z  23
First, we write the augmented matrix, writing 0 for the missing y-term
in the last equation.
 2 1 1 8 
1 3 2 1


 4 0 5 23
Our goal is to find a row-equivalent matrix of the form
1 a b
0 1 d

0 0 1
c
e .

f 
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Slide 5- 33
Example continued
 2 1 1 8 
1 3 2 1


 4 0 5 23
1 3 2 1
 2 1 1 8 


 4 0 5 23
New row 1 = row 2
New row 2 = row 1
We multiply the first row by 2 and add it to the second row.
We also multiply the first row by 4 and add it to the third row.
Row 1 is unchanged
1 3 2 1
0 5 5 10  New row 2=  2(row 1) + row 2


0 12 13 27  New row 3=  4(row 1)+row3
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Slide 5- 34
Example continued
We multiply the second row by 1/5 to get a 1 in the second row,
second column. 1 3 2 1
0 1 1 2  New row 2= 1 (row 2)
5


0 12 13 27 
We multiply the second row by 12 and add it to the third row.
1 3 2 1
0 1 1 2 


0 0 1 3  New row 3=  12(row 2) + row 3
Now, we can write the system of equations that corresponds to the
last matrix above:
x  3 y  2 z  1
yz2
z 3
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Slide 5- 35
Example continued

We back-substitute 3 for z in equation (2) and solve for y.
yz2
y3 2
y  1

Next, we back-substitute 1 for y and 3 for z in equation (1) and
solve for x.
x  3 y  2 z  1
x  3(1)  2(3)  1
x  3  6  1
x  3  1
x2

The triple (2, 1, 3) checks in the original system of equations, so it
is the solution.
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Slide 5- 36
Row-Echelon Form
1. If a row does not consist entirely of 0’s, then the first nonzero
element in the row is a 1 (called a leading 1).
2. For any two successive nonzero rows, the leading 1 in the
lower row is farther to the right than the leading 1 in the
higher row.
3. All the rows consisting entirely of 0’s are at the bottom of the
matrix.
If a fourth property is also satisfied, a matrix is said to be in
reduced row-echelon form:
4. Each column that contains a leading 1 has 0’s everywhere
else.
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Slide 5- 37
Example
Which of the following matrices are in row-echelon form?
a) 1 6 7 5 
b) 0 2 4 1 

0

0
1
0
3 4 

1 8 
c) 1 2 7
0

0
0
1
0
4
6
0

2 
0

0
0 0
d) 1 0 0 3.5
0 1 0

0 0 1
0.7 

4.5 
Matrices (a) and (d) satisfy the row-echelon criteria. In (b) the first
nonzero element is not 1. In (c), the row consisting entirely of 0’s is
not at the bottom of the matrix.
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Slide 5- 38
Gauss-Jordan Elimination

We perform row-equivalent operations on a matrix to
obtain a row-equivalent matrix in row-echelon form. We
continue to apply these operations until we have a
matrix in reduced row-echelon form.
Example: Use Gauss-Jordan elimination to solve the
system of equations from the previous example; we had
obtained the matrix
1 3 2 1
0 1 1 2 


0 0 1 3 
.
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Slide 5- 39
Gauss-Jordan Elimination continued

We continue to perform row-equivalent operations until
we have a matrix in reduced row-echelon form.
1 3 0 5 
0 1 0 1


0 0 1 3 

New row 1 = 2(row 3) + row 1
New row 2 =  1(row 3) + row 2
Next, we multiply the second row by 3 and add it to the
first row.
1 0 0 2 
0 1 0 1


0 0 1 3 
New row 1 = 3(row 2) + row 1
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Slide 5- 40
Gauss-Jordan Elimination continued

Writing the system of equations that corresponds to this
matrix, we have
2
 1
x
y
z

3
We can actually read the solution, (2, 1, 3), directly
from the last column of the reduced row-echelon matrix.
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Slide 5- 41
Special Systems

When a row consists entirely of 0’s, the equations are
dependent and the system is equivalent.

When we obtain a row whose only nonzero entry
occurs in the last column, we have an inconsistent
system of equations. For example, in the matrix
1 0 4 6 
0 1 4 8 


0 0 0 9 

the last row corresponds to the false equation 0 = 9, so
we know the original system has no solution.
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Slide 5- 42
8.4
Matrix Operations

Add, subtract, and multiply matrices when possible.

Write a matrix equation equivalent to a system of
equations.
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Matrices


A capital letter is generally used to name a matrix, and
lower-case letters with double subscripts generally
denote its entries.
For example, a23 read “a sub two three,” indicates the
entry in the second row and the third column.
 a11
A  [aij ]  

 am1

a1n 


amn 
Two matrices are equal if they have the same order
and corresponding entries are equal.
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Slide 5- 44
Matrix Addition and Subtraction


To add or subtract matrices, we add or subtract their
corresponding entries.
Addition and Subtraction of Matrices
Given two m  n matrices A = [aij] and B = [bij], their
sum is
A + B = [aij + bij]
and their difference is
A  B = [aij  bij].
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Slide 5- 45
Example

Find A + B for each of the following.
 6 7 
a) A = 
1
2
4

 1 4
b) A   2 6 


 7 0 
 2 4
B= 

8 4
2 4
B   4 2 


 5 3
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Slide 5- 46
Example continued

We have a pair of 2  2 matrices in part (a) and a pair of
3  2 matrices in part (b). Since each pair has the same
order we can add their corresponding entries.
 6 7   2 4
A+B= 


1 
 2 4   8 4
 6  2 7  (4)   4 3 

   6 3 3 
1
2

(

8
)

(

4
)
4
4

 
1
A + B   2

 7
 1 2
  2  (4)

 7  (5)
4  2 4 
6    4 2 
 

0   5 3
44   3 8 
6  2    6 8 
 

0  (3)   2 3
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Slide 5- 47
Example


Find C  D for each of the
following.
a)
1 2
 1 3
C   3 0  D   4 7 




 4 2
 0 3 

b)
 5 6 
 9
C
 D 2 
1
2


 
Since the matrices do not have
the same order, we cannot
subtract them.
Since the order of each matrix is
3  2, we can subtract
corresponding entries.
 1 2   1 3
C  D   3 0    4 7 

 

 4 2   0 3 
1  (1) 2  ( 3)   2 5 
  3  4
0  7    7  7 

 

 4  0
2  3   4 5 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 48
Scalar Multiplication

When we find the product of a number and a matrix, we
obtain a scalar product.

The scalar product of a number k and a matrix A is the
matrix denoted kA, obtained by multiplying each entry
of A by the number k. The number k is called a scalar.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 49
Example

Find 4A and (2)A for
 4 1 
.
A= 

 0 7
Solution:
 4 1   4(4) 4(1)   16 4 
4A = 4 





0
7
4
(
0
)
4
(
7
)
0
28

 
 

 4 1   2(4) 2(1)  8 2 
2A =  2 





0
7

2(0)

2(7)
0

14

 
 

Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 50
Properties of Matrix Addition and
Scalar Multiplication




For any m  n matrices, A, B, and C and any scalars k
and l:
Commutative Property of Addition
A+B=B+A
Associative Property of Addition
A + (B + C) = (A + B) + C
Associative Property of Scalar Multiplication
(kl)A = k(lA)
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Slide 5- 51
More Properties

Distributive Property
k(A + B) = kA + kB
(k + l)A = kA + lA
There exists a unique matrix 0 such that:
A+0=0+A=A
Additive Identity Property
There exists a unique matrix A such that:
A + (A) = A + A = 0 Additive Inverse Property
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Slide 5- 52
Matrix Multiplication

For an m  n matrix A = [aij] and an n  p matrix
B = [bij], the product AB = [cij] is an m  p matrix,
where
cij = ai1 • b1j + ai2 • b2j + ai3 • b3j + … + ain • bnj.
We can multiply two matrices only when the number of
columns in the first matrix is equal to the number of
rows in the second matrix.
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Slide 5- 53
Examples

For
 0 4 
 2 4
 2 2 2


A
, B  2 7 , and C  





1
0
1
0
4
,




 1 3 
find each of the following.
a) AB
b) BA
c) AC
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Slide 5- 54
Solution AB

A is a 2  3 matrix and B is a 3  2 matrix, so AB
will be a 2  2 matrix.
0
 2 2 2  
AB  
2


1 0 4   1

 2(0)  2(2)  2(1)

 1(0)  0(2)  4(1)
4 
7 

3 
2(4)  2(7)  ( 2)(3)   6 28


1(4)  0(7)  4(3)   4 8 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 55
Solution BA

B is a 3  2 matrix and A is a 2  3 matrix, so BA will be
a 3  3 matrix.
 0 4 
 2 2 2 


BA  2 7 

 1 0 4 
 1 3 
 0(2)  (4)(1) 0(2)  (4)(0) 0(2)  (4)(4)   4 0 16 
  2(2)  (7)(1) 2(2)  (7)(0) 2(2)  (7)(4)    3 4 32 

 

 1(2)  3(1)
1(2)  3(0)
1(2)  3(4)   1 2 14 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 56
Solution AC

The product AC is not defined because the number
of columns of A, 3, is not equal to the number
of rows of C, 2.

Note that AB  BA. Multiplication of matrices is
generally not commutative.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 57
Application

Dalton’s Dairy produces no-fat ice cream and frozen
yogurt. The following table shows the number of gallons
of each product that are sold at the dairy’s three retail
outlets one week. On each gallon of no-fat ice cream,
the dairy’s profit is $4, and on each gallon of frozen
yogurt, it is $3. Use matrices to find the total profit on
these items at each store for the given week.
Store 1
Store 2
Store 3
No-fat Ice Cream (in
gallons)
100
80
120
Frozen Yogurt (in
gallons)
160
120
100
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Slide 5- 58
Application continued
We can write the table showing the distribution as a
2  3 matrix.
100 80 120
D

160
120
100


The profit per gallon can also be written as a matrix.
P   4 3
The total profit at each store is given by the matrix
product PD.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 59
Application continued
100 80 120 
PD   4 3 

160
120
100


  4(100)  3(160) 4(80)  3(120) 4(120)  3(100)
 880 680 780

The total profit on no-fat ice cream and frozen yogurt for
the given week was $880 at store 1, $680 at store 2,
and $780 at store 3.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 60
Properties of Matrix Multiplication

For matrices A, B, and C, assuming that the indicated
operations are possible:

Associative Property of Multiplication
A(BC) = (AB)C

Distributive Property
A(B + C) = AB + AC
(B + C)A = BA + CA
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Slide 5- 61
Matrix Equations

We can write a matrix equation equivalent to a system
of equations.
Example: 3 x  y  z  11
5x 
z 9
x  2 y  3 z  3
Can be written as:
3 1 1  x   11 
5 0 1   y    9 

   
1 2 3  z   3
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 62
8.5
Inverses of Matrices

Find the inverse of a square matrix, if it exists.

Use inverses of matrices to solve systems of equations.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
The Identity Matrix
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 64
Example

For
a) AI
1 3
A
and I =

4 6
1 0 
0 1  find each of the following.


b) IA
1 3  1 0 
AI  


 4 6 0 1 
 1(1)  3(0) 1(0)  3(1)  1 3 


A


 4(1)  6(0) 4(0)  6(1)   4 6 
1 0   1 3 
IA  
  4 6
0
1



(1)(1)  (0)(4) (1)(3)  (0)(6)  1 3


A


 (0)(1)  (1)4 (0)(3)  (1)(6)   4 6 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 65
Inverse of a Matrix

For an n  n matrix A, if there is a matrix A1 for which
A1 • A = I = A • A1, then A1 is the inverse of A.
3 4 
 7 4
Verify that B  
is the inverse of A  
.


5 7 
 5 3 
We show that BA = I = AB.
3 4   7 4  1
BA = 




5 7   5 3  0
 7 4  3 4  1
AB  




 5 3  5 7  0
0
1 
0
1 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 66
Finding an Inverse Matrix

To find an inverse, we first form an augmented matrix consisting
of A on the left side and the identity matrix on the right side.
3 4 1 0 
5 7 0 1 



The 2  2
The 2  2
matrix A
identity matrix
Then we attempt to transform the augmented matrix to one of the
form
1 0 a b 
0 1. c d 


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Slide 5- 67
Example

Find
A1,
3 4 
where A = 
.

5 7 
3 4 1 0 
5 7 0 1 


1 43 13 0 new row 1 = 13 (row 1)


5
7
0
1


1

0
4
3
1
3
1
3
5
3
0

1  new row 2 =  5(row 1) + row 2
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 68
Example continued
1 43 13 0

 new row 2 = 3(row 2)
0 1 5 3
1 0 7 4 new row 1 =
0 1 5 3 


Thus,
A1
-4
3
(row 3) + row 1
 7 4
= 
.

 5 3 
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Slide 5- 69
Notes

If a matrix has an inverse, we say that it is invertible, or
nonsingular.

When we cannot obtain the identity matrix on the left
using the Gauss-Jordan method, then no inverse exists.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 70
Solving Systems of Equations

Matrix Solutions of Systems of Equations
For a system of n linear equations in n variables,
AX = B, if A is an invertible matrix, then the unique
solution of the system is given by X = A1B.
Since matrix multiplication is not commutative in
general, care must be taken to multiply on the left by
A1.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 71
Example

Use an inverse matrix to solve the following system of
equations:
3x + 4y = 5
5x + 7y = 9
We write an equivalent matrix, AX = B:
3 4   x  5
5 7    y   9 

    
A  X = B
In the previous example we found
A1
=
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
 7 4
 5 3  .


Slide 5- 72
Example continued

We now have X = A1B.
 x   7 4 5 7(5)  (4)(9)   1
 y    5 3  9   5(5)  3(9)    2 
  
  
  

The solution of the system of equations is (1, 2).
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 73
8.6
Determinants and
Cramer’s Rule

Evaluate determinants of square matrices.

Use Cramer’s rule to solve systems of equations.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Determinants of Square Matrices

a c 
The determinant of the matrix 
is denoted

b d 
a c
and is defined as
b d
a c
 ad  bc.
b d
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 75
Example

Evaluate:
3
6

Solution:
2 .
 3
3
2
6
 3


 3  3  (6)(2)
 3  12
 15
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 76
Evaluating Determinants Using Cofactors

Minor
 For a square matrix A = [aij], the minor Mij of an
element aij is the determinant of the matrix formed by
deleting the ith row and the jth column of A.
 2 0 1
 4 5 3
A

[
a
]

Example: For the matrix
ij


 1 2 4 
find each of the following.
a) M11
b) M22
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Slide 5- 77
Solution

For M11, we delete the first row and the first column and
find the determinant of the 2  2 matrix formed by the
remaining elements.
 2 0 1
 4 5 3


 1 2 4 
5 3
M 11 
2 4
 5(4)  (2)(3)
 20  (6)
 20  6
 14
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Slide 5- 78
Solution

For M22, we delete the second row and the second
column and find the determinant of the 2  2 matrix
formed by the remaining elements.
 2 0 1
 4 5 3


 1 2 4 
M 22
2 1

1 4
 (2)(4)  (1)(1)
 8 1
7
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Slide 5- 79
Cofactor

For a square matrix A = [aij], the cofactor Aij of an
element aij is given by
Aij = (1)i + jMij,
where Mij is the minor of aij.
Example:
Find each of the following.
a) A11
b) A22
 2 0 1
A=  4 5 3


 1 2 4 
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 80
Solution
a) We found M11 = 14, then
A11 = (1)1+1(14) = 14.
b) We found M22 = 7, then
A22 = (1)2+2(7) = 7.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 81
Determinant of Any Square Matrix

For any square matrix A of order n  n (n > 1), we
define the determinant of A, denoted |A|, as follows.
Choose any row or column. Multiply each element in
that row or column by its cofactor and add the results.
The determinant of a 1  1 matrix is simply the element
of the matrix. The value of a determinant will be the
same no matter which row or column is chosen.
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Slide 5- 82
Cramer’s Rule for 2  2 Systems
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 83
Example

Solve using Cramer’s Rule: 3x  4 y  1
7 x  5 y  31
1 4
31 5 (1)(5)  (4)(31) 129
x


3
3 4
(3)(5)  (7)(4)
43
7 5
3 1
7 31 (3)(31)  (7)(1) 86
y


 2
3 4
43
43
7 5
The solution is (3, 2).
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 84
Cramer’s Rule for 3  3 Systems
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Slide 5- 85
Example

Solve using Cramer’s rule: x  2 y  3z  14
x yz 0
x  2 y  z  2
Solution: We have
1 2 3
D  1 1 1  4
1 2 1
14 2 3
Dx  0 1 1  4
2
2 1
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Slide 5- 86
Example continued
1 14 3
Dy  1
0 1  8
1 2
1
Then
Dx 4
x

 1
D
4
Dy 8
y
 2
D 4
Dz 12
z

 3
D
4
1 2 14
Dz  1 1 0  12
1 2
2
The solution is (1, 2, 3).
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Slide 5- 87
8.7
Systems of Inequalities and
Linear Programming

Graph linear inequalities.

Graph systems of linear inequalities.

Solve linear programming problems.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Linear Inequalities

A linear inequality in two variables is an inequality
that can be written in the form
Ax + By < C,
where A, B, and C are real numbers and A and B are
not both zero. The symbol < may be replaced with , >,
or .
The solution set of an inequality is the set of all
ordered pairs that make it true. The graph of an
inequality represents its solution set.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 89
Example



Graph y > x  4.
We begin by graphing
the related equation
y = x  4. We use a
dashed line because the
inequality symbol is >.
This indicates that the
line itself is not in the
solution set.
Determine which halfplane satisfies the
inequality.

y>x4
0?04
0 > 4 True
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 90
To Graph a Linear Inequality:

Replace the inequality symbol with an equals sign
and graph this related equation. If the inequality
symbol is < or >, draw the line dashed. If the inequality
symbol is  or , draw the line solid.

The graph consists of a half-plane on one side of the
line and, if the line is solid, the line as well. To
determine which half-plane to shade, test a point not on
the line in the original inequality. If that point is a
solution, shade the half-plane containing that point. If
not, shade the opposite half-plane.
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Slide 5- 91
Example
Graph: 4x + 2y  8
1. Graph the related
equation, using a solid
line.
2. Determine which
half-plane to shade.
4x + 2y
8
4(0) + 2(0)
?8
08
We shade the region
containing (0, 0).

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Slide 5- 92
Example

Graph x > 2 on a plane.
1. Graph the related
equation.
2. Pick a test point (0, 0).
x>2
0 > 2 False
Because (0, 0) is not a
solution, we shade the
half-plane that does not
contain that point.
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Slide 5- 93
Example

Graph y  2 on a plane.
1. Graph the related
equation.
2. Select a test point (0, 0).
y2
0  2 True
Because (0, 0) is a
solution, we shade the
region containing that
point.
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Slide 5- 94
Systems of Linear Inequalities

Graph the solution set of the
system.
x y3
x  y 1


The solution set of the system
of equations is the region
shaded both red and green,
including part of the line
x + y  3.
First, we graph x + y  3 using
a solid line. Choose a test
point (0, 0) and shade the
correct plane.
Next, we graph x  y > 1 using
a dashed line. Choose a test
point and shade the correct
plane.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 95
Example


Graph the following
system of inequalities
and find the coordinates
of any vertices formed:
y20
x  y  2
x y0
We graph the related
equations using solid
lines. We shade the
region common to all
three solution sets.

To find the vertices, we
solve three systems of
equations. The system of
equations from
inequalities (1) and (2):
y+2=0
x + y = 2
The vertex is (4, 2).
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Slide 5- 96
Example continued


The system of equations
from inequalities
(1) and (3):
y+2=0
x+y=0
The vertex is (2, 2).
The system of equations
from inequalities
(2) and (3):
x + y = 2
x+y=0
The vertex is (1, 1).
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Slide 5- 97
Linear Programming



In many applications, we want to find a maximum or
minimum value. Linear programming can tell us how to
do this.
Constraints are expressed as inequalities. The
solution set of the system of inequalities made up of the
constraints contains all the feasible solutions of a
linear programming problem.
The function that we want to maximize or minimize is
called the objective function.
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Slide 5- 98
Linear Programming Procedure

To find the maximum or minimum value of a linear
objective function subject to a set of constraints:
1. Graph the region of feasible solutions.
2. Determine the coordinates of the vertices of the region.
3. Evaluate the objective function at each vertex. The
largest and smallest of those values are the maximum
and minimum values of the function, respectively.
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Slide 5- 99
Example

A tray of corn muffins requires 4 cups of milk and 3
cups of wheat flour. A tray of pumpkin muffins requires
2 cups of milk and 3 cups of wheat flour. There are 16
cups of milk and 15 cups of wheat flour available, and
the baker makes $3 per tray profit on corn muffins and
$2 per tray profit on pumpkin muffins. How many trays
of each should the baker make in order to maximize
profits?
Solution: We let x = the number of corn muffins and
y = the number of pumpkin muffins. Then the profit P
is given by the function P = 3x + 2y.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 100
Example continued

We know that x muffins require 4 cups of milk and
y
muffins require 2 cups of milk. Since there are no more
than 16 cups of milk, we have one constraint.
4x + 2y  16

Similarly, the muffins require 3 and 3 cups of wheat
flour. There are no more than 15 cups of flour available,
so we have a second constraint. 3x + 3y  15

We also know x  0 and y  0 because the baker
cannot make a negative number of either muffin.
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Slide 5- 101
Example continued

Thus we want to maximize the objective function
P = 3x + 2y subject to the constraints
4x + 2y  16,
3x + 3y  15,
x  0,
y  0.
We graph the system of inequalities and determine the
vertices. Next, we evaluate the objective function P at
each vertex.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 102
Example continued
Vertices
Profit
P = 3x+ 2y
(0, 0)
P = 3(0) + 2(0) = 0
(4, 0)
P = 3(4) + 2(0) = 12
(0, 5)
P = 3(0) + 2(5) = 10
(3, 2)
P = 3(3) + 2(2) = 13
Maximum
The baker will make a maximum profit when 3 trays of corn
muffins and 2 trays of pumpkin muffins are produced.
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Slide 5- 103
8.8
Partial Fractions

Decompose rational expressions into partial fractions.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Partial
Fractions
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Slide 5- 105
Example

Decompose into partial fractions:
4 x  13 .
2 x2  x  6
Solution: The degree of the numerator is less than the
degree of the denominator. We begin by factoring the
denominator: (x + 2)(2x  3). We know that there are
constants A and B such that
4 x  13
A
B


.
( x  2)(2 x  3) x  2 2 x  3
To determine A and B, we add the expressions on the
right:
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Slide 5- 106
Example continued
4 x  13
A(2 x  3)  B( x  2)
.

( x  2)(2 x  3)
( x  2)(2 x  3)
Next, we equate the numerators:
4x  13 = A(2x  3) + B(x + 2).
Since the last equation containing A and B is true for all x,
we can substitute any value of x and still have a true
equation. If we choose x = 3/2, then 2x  3 = 0 and A will be
eliminated when we make the substitution. This gives us
4(3/2)  13 = A[2(3/2)  3] + B(3/2 + 2)
7 = 0 + (7/2)B.
Solving we obtain B = 2.
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Slide 5- 107
Example continued


If we choose x = 2, then x + 2 = 0 and B will be
eliminated when we make the substitution. This gives
us 4(2)  13 = A[2(2)  3] + B(2 + 2)
21 = 7A.
Solving, we obtain A = 3.
The decomposition is as follows:
4 x  13
3
2
3
2


or

.
2
2x  x  6 x  2 2x  3
x  2 2x  3
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Slide 5- 108
Another Example
Decompose into partial fractions:
7 x2  29 x  24
(2 x  1)( x  2)2
.
Solution: The degree of the numerator is 2 and the
degree of the denominator is 3, so the degree of the
numerator is less than the degree of the denominator.
The denominator is given in factored form. The
decomposition has the following form:
7 x 2  29 x  24
A
B
C
.



2
2
(2 x  1)( x  2)
2 x  1 x  2 ( x  2)
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Slide 5- 109
Another Example continued
Next, we add the expression on the right:
7 x 2  29 x  24 A( x  2)2  B(2 x  1)( x  2)  C (2 x  1)

2
(2 x  1)( x  2)
(2 x  1)( x  2)2
Then, we equate the numerators. This gives us
7 x2  29 x  24  A( x  2)2  B(2 x  1)( x  2)  C (2 x  1)
Since the equation containing A, B, and C is true for all of x, we can
substitute any value of x and still have a true equation. In order to
have 2x – 1 = 0, we let x = 1 . This gives us
2
1 2
1
1
7( )  29   24  A(  2) 2  0.
2
2
2
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Slide 5- 110
Another Example continued


Solving, we obtain A = 5.
 In order to have x  2 = 0, we let x = 2. Substituting
gives us 7(2)2  29(2)  24  0  C (2  2  1).
Solving, we obtain C = 2 .
1
 To find B, we choose any value for x except or 2
2
and replace A with 5 and C with 2 . We let x = 1:
7 12  29 1  24  5(1  2) 2  B(2 1  1)(1  2)  (2)(2 1  1)
2  5 B 2
B 1
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Slide 5- 111
Another Example continued

The decomposition is as follows:
7 x 2  29 x  24
5
1
2



.
2
2
(2 x  1)( x  2)
2 x  1 x  2 ( x  2)
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Slide 5- 112
Another Example
2
11
x
 8x  7 .
Decompose into partial fractions:
(2 x 2  1)( x  3)
Solution: The decomposition has the following form.
11x 2  8 x  7
Ax  B
C
 2

2
(2 x  1)( x  3) 2 x  1 x  3
Adding and equating numerators, we get
11x 2  8 x  7  ( Ax  B)( x  3)  C (2 x 2  1)
 Ax 2  3 Ax  Bx  3B  2Cx 2  C ,
or 11x  8 x  7  ( A  2C ) x  ( 3 A  B) x  (3B  C ).
2
2
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Slide 5- 113
Another Example continued
We then equate corresponding coefficients:
11 = A + 2C,
The coefficients of the x2-terms
8 = 3A + B, The coefficients of the x-terms
7 = 3B  C. The constant terms
We solve this system of three equations and obtain
A = 3, B = 1, and C = 4.
The decomposition is as follows:
11x 2  8 x  7
3x  1
4
 2

.
2
(2 x  1)( x  3) 2 x  1 x  3
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Slide 5- 114