How do you find the equation of the line perpendicular to y+5=3(x-2) that passes through the point (6, 2)?

2 Answers
Mar 6, 2018

Let,the equation of line be y=mx+c, where, m is its slope and c is the Y intercept.

Now,arranging the given equation in the above mentioned form to get its slope,

Given, y+5=3(x-2)=y=3x-11

So,its slope is 3

Now,for two lines to be mutually perpendicular,their product of slope must be -1

So, m*3=-1

or. m=-1/3

So,our required line equation becomes, y=-1/3 x+c

Now,given,that the line passes through (6,2),so putting the values in the equation to get c

So, 2=(-1/3)*6 +c

or, c=4

So,the equation of the line is y=-1/3 x+4

or, 3y+x=12 graph{3y+x=12 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

Mar 6, 2018

y-2 = -1/3(x-6)

Or y = -1/3x +4

Or x+3y =12

Or x+3y-12=0

Explanation:

There are several forms for the equation of a straight line:

y = mx+c," and " ax +by +c =0" " are well known.

Another is y-y_1 = m(x-x_1)

where (x_1, y_1) is a point and m is the slope.

This is exactly the form we have for the given equation:

y+5=color(blue)(3)(x-2)" "rarr :. color(blue)(m= 3)

If lines are perpendicular, the product of their slopes is -1

One is the negative reciprocal of the other, so:

m_1 = 3 " "rArr" "m_2 =-1/3

Using m= -1/3 and the point (6,2)

y-y_1 = m(x-x_1)" " gives" "y-2 = -1/3(x-6)

Or in another form:

y= -1/3x+2+2" "rarr y = -1/3x +4

Or even

3y =-x+12" "rarr" "x+3y =12