Line Plane Intersection 069383
1. **Problem statement:**
We have a line \(\mathcal{L}\) (from part 2, assumed parametric form \(x=1+t, y=2-2t, z=3t\)) and a plane \(\mathcal{P}\) given by the equation \(x + 3y - z = -4\).
(a) Show that \(\mathcal{L}\) intersects \(\mathcal{P}\) at a unique point and find its coordinates.
(b) Find the line \(\mathcal{M}\) lying in \(\mathcal{P}\), perpendicular to \(\mathcal{L}\), passing through the intersection point.
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2. **Recall formulas and rules:**
- To find intersection, substitute parametric equations of \(\mathcal{L}\) into the plane equation.
- A line \(\mathcal{M}\) perpendicular to \(\mathcal{L}\) means its direction vector is orthogonal to \(\mathcal{L}\)'s direction vector.
- \(\mathcal{M}\) lies in \(\mathcal{P}\), so its direction vector is perpendicular to the plane's normal vector.
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3. **Part (a) Intersection:**
- Parametric equations of \(\mathcal{L}\):
\[
x = 1 + t, \quad y = 2 - 2t, \quad z = 3t
\]
- Substitute into plane equation:
\[
(1 + t) + 3(2 - 2t) - 3t = -4
\]
- Simplify:
\[
1 + t + 6 - 6t - 3t = -4
\]
\[
7 - 8t = -4
\]
- Solve for \(t\):
\[
-8t = -11 \implies t = \frac{11}{8}
\]
- Find coordinates:
\[
x = 1 + \frac{11}{8} = \frac{19}{8}, \quad y = 2 - 2 \times \frac{11}{8} = 2 - \frac{22}{8} = \frac{16}{8} - \frac{22}{8} = -\frac{6}{8} = -\frac{3}{4}, \quad z = 3 \times \frac{11}{8} = \frac{33}{8}
\]
- So the intersection point is \(\left(\frac{19}{8}, -\frac{3}{4}, \frac{33}{8}\right)\).
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4. **Part (b) Line \(\mathcal{M}\):**
- Direction vector of \(\mathcal{L}\) is \(\vec{d}_L = (1, -2, 3)\).
- Plane normal vector is \(\vec{n} = (1, 3, -1)\).
- \(\mathcal{M}\) lies in \(\mathcal{P}\), so its direction vector \(\vec{d}_M\) is perpendicular to \(\vec{n}\):
\[
\vec{d}_M \cdot \vec{n} = 0
\]
- \(\mathcal{M}\) is perpendicular to \(\mathcal{L}\), so:
\[
\vec{d}_M \cdot \vec{d}_L = 0
\]
- Find \(\vec{d}_M = (a,b,c)\) satisfying:
\[
a + 3b - c = 0
\]
\[
a - 2b + 3c = 0
\]
- Solve system:
From first: \(c = a + 3b\)
Substitute into second:
\[
a - 2b + 3(a + 3b) = 0 \implies a - 2b + 3a + 9b = 0 \implies 4a + 7b = 0
\]
- Express \(a\) in terms of \(b\):
\[
a = -\frac{7}{4}b
\]
- Then \(c = a + 3b = -\frac{7}{4}b + 3b = -\frac{7}{4}b + \frac{12}{4}b = \frac{5}{4}b\)
- Choose \(b=4\) for simplicity:
\[
a = -7, \quad b=4, \quad c=5
\]
- Direction vector \(\vec{d}_M = (-7, 4, 5)\).
- Parametric equations of \(\mathcal{M}\) passing through intersection point \(P_0 = \left(\frac{19}{8}, -\frac{3}{4}, \frac{33}{8}\right)\):
\[
x = \frac{19}{8} - 7t, \quad y = -\frac{3}{4} + 4t, \quad z = \frac{33}{8} + 5t
\]
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**Final answers:**
- (a) Intersection point: \(\left(\frac{19}{8}, -\frac{3}{4}, \frac{33}{8}\right)\)
- (b) Line \(\mathcal{M}\) parametric form:
\[
x = \frac{19}{8} - 7t, \quad y = -\frac{3}{4} + 4t, \quad z = \frac{33}{8} + 5t
\]