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Determine values of k for solution type (Example 1)

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Question: Determine which values of \(k\), if any, will give
(a) a unique solution, (b) no solution, (c) infinitely many solutions for:

$$
\begin{aligned}
x &+ 2y &- z &= 1\\
2x &+ 3y &+ z &= 1\\
-4x &- 5y &+ (k^2-9)z &= k+1
\end{aligned}
$$

Step 1: Write the augmented matrix and row-reduce (REF)

Start with the augmented matrix \([A\mid b]\):

$$
\left[\begin{array}{ccc|c}
1 & 2 & -1 & 1\\
2 & 3 & 1 & 1\\
-4 & -5 & k^2-9 & k+1
\end{array}\right]
$$

After row reduction to REF, we reach:

$$
\left[\begin{array}{ccc|c}
1 & 2 & -1 & 1\\
0 & 1 & -3 & 1\\
0 & 0 & k^2 – 4 & k+2
\end{array}\right]
$$

The last row represents:

$$
(k^2-4)z = k+2
$$

Step 2: Use the last row to decide the solution type

(a) Unique solution

A unique solution happens when the last pivot entry is nonzero:

$$
k^2-4 \neq 0 \;\Rightarrow\; k \neq 2,\,-2
$$

✅ Unique solution: \(k \neq 2,\,-2\)

(b) No solution

No solution happens when we get a contradiction \(0=\text{nonzero}\).
This occurs when:

$$
k^2-4 = 0 \quad \text{and} \quad k+2 \neq 0
$$

If \(k=2\), the last row becomes:

$$
0\cdot z = 4 \;\Rightarrow\; 0=4
$$

❌ No solution: \(k=2\)

(c) Infinitely many solutions

Infinitely many solutions happen when the last row becomes \(0=0\).

If \(k=-2\), the last row becomes:

$$
0\cdot z = 0
$$

So one variable is free ⇒ infinitely many solutions.

♾️ Infinitely many solutions: \(k=-2\)

Final Answer

  • Unique solution: \(k\neq 2,\,-2\)
  • No solution: \(k=2\)
  • Infinitely many solutions: \(k=-2\)

Quick checklist (10 seconds)

After you reach REF, look only at the last row:

$$
[0\ \ 0\ \ k^2-4 \mid k+2]
$$

  • If \(k^2-4\neq 0\) ⇒ pivot in \(z\) ⇒ unique solution
  • If \(k^2-4=0\) and \(k+2\neq 0\) ⇒ \(0=\text{nonzero}\) ⇒ no solution
  • If \(k^2-4=0\) and \(k+2=0\) ⇒ \(0=0\) ⇒ infinitely many solutions

Practice (based on this example)

1) If \(k=3\), what type of solution do we get?
2) If \(k=2\), what type of solution do we get?
3) If \(k=-2\), what type of solution do we get?

Answers

1) \(k=3\): unique solution
2) \(k=2\): no solution
3) \(k=-2\): infinitely many solutions


Extra Practice (2 variables: \(x, y\))

1) Classify the solution type

Determine for what values of \(k\) the system has a unique solution, no solution, or infinitely many solutions:

$$
\begin{aligned}
x + 2y &= 3\\
2x + 4y &= k
\end{aligned}
$$

Answers

  • If \(k=6\) ⇒ infinitely many solutions
  • If \(k\neq 6\) ⇒ no solution
  • Unique solution: none

2) When is there a unique solution?

Determine for what values of \(k\) the system has a unique solution:

$$
\begin{aligned}
kx + y &= 1\\
x + y &= 2
\end{aligned}
$$

Answers

  • If \(k\neq 1\) ⇒ unique solution
  • If \(k=1\) ⇒ no solution
  • Infinitely many solutions: none

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