Solutions to Try Its
1. [latex]\left(-\frac{1}{2},\frac{1}{2}\right)[/latex] and [latex]\left(2,8\right)[/latex]
2. [latex]\left(-1,3\right)[/latex]
3. [latex]\left\{\left(1,3\right),\left(1,-3\right),\left(-1,3\right),\left(-1,-3\right)\right\}[/latex]
4. Shade the area bounded by the two curves, above the quadratic and below the line.
Solutions to Odd-Numbered Exercises
1. A nonlinear system could be representative of two circles that overlap and intersect in two locations, hence two solutions. A nonlinear system could be representative of a parabola and a circle, where the vertex of the parabola meets the circle and the branches also intersect the circle, hence three solutions.
3. No. There does not need to be a feasible region. Consider a system that is bounded by two parallel lines. One inequality represents the region above the upper line; the other represents the region below the lower line. In this case, no points in the plane are located in both regions; hence there is no feasible region.
5. Choose any number between each solution and plug into [latex]C\left(x\right)[/latex] and [latex]R\left(x\right)[/latex]. If [latex]C\left(x\right)
41.
43.
45.
47.
49. [latex]\left(-2\sqrt{\frac{70}{383}},-2\sqrt{\frac{35}{29}}\right),\left(-2\sqrt{\frac{70}{383}},2\sqrt{\frac{35}{29}}\right),\left(2\sqrt{\frac{70}{383}},-2\sqrt{\frac{35}{29}}\right),\left(2\sqrt{\frac{70}{383}},2\sqrt{\frac{35}{29}}\right)[/latex]
51. No Solution Exists
53. [latex]x=0,y>0[/latex] and [latex]0Candela Citations