Assignment 7

#$&*

course Mth 163

2/4/13 6:35

If your solution to stated problem does not match the given solution, you should self-critique per instructions at

http://vhcc2.vhcc.edu/dsmith/geninfo/labrynth_created_fall_05/levl1_22/levl2_81/file3_259.htm

.

Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a phrase-by-phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or do not understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in completing the assignment, before you look at the given solution.

007.

*********************************************

Question: `q001. Note that this assignment has 8 questions

Sketch a graph of the following (x, y) points: (1,2), (3, 5), (6, 6). Then sketch the straight line which appears to come as close as possible, on the average, to the three points. Your straight line should not actually pass through any of the given points.

• Describe how your straight line lies in relation to the points.

• Give the coordinates of the point at which your straight line passes through the y axes, and give the coordinates of the x = 2 and x = 7 points on your straight line.

• Determine the slope of the straight line between the last two points you gave.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

My line lies above the first and third coordinates and below the second coordinate. The y intercept is at (0, 1.7894). X=2 has coordinates at (2, 3.3157). X=7 has coordinates at (7, 7.13157). The slope between these two points is .0763174.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Your straight line should pass above the first and third points and beneath the second. If this is not the case the line can be modified so that it comes closer on the average to all three points.

The best possible straight line passes through the y-axis near y = 2. The x = 2 point on the best possible line has a y coordinate of about 3, and the x = 7 point has a y coordinate of about 7. So the best possible straight line contains points with approximate coordinate (2,3) and (7,7).

The slope between these two points is rise/run = (7 - 3)/(7 - 2) = 4/5 = .8.

Note that the actual slope and y intercept of the true best-fit line, to 3 significant figures, are .763 and 1.79. So the equation of the line is .763 x + 1.79

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q002. Plug coordinates of the x = 2 and x = 7 points into the form y = m x + b to obtain two simultaneous linear equations. Give your two equations. Then solve the equations for m and b and substitute these values into the form y = m x + b. What equation do you get?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

3.3157=2m+b

7.13157=7m+b

7=7m+b

-3=-2m-b

4=m5

4/5=m

3=4/5*2+b

3=8/5+b

7/5=b

Y=4/5x+7/5

confidence rating #$&*: 2

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Plugging the coordinates (2,3) and (7, 7) into the form y = m x + b we obtain the equations

3 = 2 * m + b

7 = 7 * m + b.

Subtracting the first equation from the second will eliminate b. We get 4 = 5 * m. Dividing by 5 we get m = 4/5 = .8.

Plugging m = .8 into the first equation we get 3 = 2 * .8 + b, so 3 = 1.6 + b and b = 3 - 1.6 = 1.4.

Now the equation y = m x + b becomes y = .8 x + 1.4.

Note that the actual best-fit line is y = .763 x + 1.79, accurate to three significant figures.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q003. Using the equation y = .8 x + 1.4, find the coordinates of the x = 1, 3, and 6 points on the graph of the equation.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

(1,2.2)

(3, 3.8)

(6,6.2)

confidence rating #$&*:3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Evaluating y =.8 x + 1.4 at x = 1, 3, and 6 we obtain y values 2.2, 3.8, and 6.2.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q004. The equation y = .8 x + 1.4 gives you points (1, 2.2), (3, 3.8), and (6,6.2). How close, on the average, do these points come to the original data points (1,2), (3, 5), and (6, 6)?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

(1,2.2) differs by .2

(3,3.8) differs by 1.2

(6,6.2) differs by .2

On average the points are .53 correct.

confidence rating #$&*:3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

(1, 2.2) differs from (1, 2) by the .2 unit difference between y = 2 and y = 2.2.

(3, 3.8) differs from (3, 5) by the 1.2 unit difference between y = 5 and y = 3.8.

(6, 6.2) differs from (6, 6) by the .2 unit difference between y = 6 and y = 6.2.

{}The average discrepancy is the average of the three discrepancies:

ave discrepancy = ( .2 + 1.2 + .2 ) / 3 = .53.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q005. Using the best-fit equation y =.76 x + 1.79, with the numbers accurate to the nearest .01, how close do the predicted points corresponding to x = 1, 3, and 6 come to the original data points (1,2), (3, 5), and (6, 6)?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

(1, 2.55) differs by .55

(3,4.07) differs by .93

(6,6.35) differs by .35

They differ by an average of .61

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Evaluating y =.76 x + 1.79 at x = 1, 3 and 6 we obtain y values 2.55, 4.07 and 6.35. This gives us the points (1,2.55), (3,4.07) and (6, 6.35). These points lie at distances of .55, .93, and .35 from the original data points.

The average distance is (.55 + .93 + .35) / 3 = .61 from the points.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

*********************************************

Question: `q006. The average distance of the best-fit line to the data points appears to greater than the average distance of the line we obtain by an estimate. In fact, the best-fit line doesn't really minimize the average distance but rather the square of the average distance. The distances for the best-fit model are .55, .93 and .35, while the average distances for our first model are .2, 1.2 and .2. Verify that the average of the square distances is indeed less for the best-fit model.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

The squares of the first model are .04, 1.44, and .04. The average of the squares are .51.

The squares of the best fit data are .3, .87, and .12. The average of the squares is .43. So the best fit model gives better results.

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

The square distances for the best-fit model are .55^2 = .30, .93^2 = .87 and .35^2 = .12. The average of these square distances is (.30 + .87 + .12) / 3 = .43.

The squared distances for the first model are .2^2 = .04, 1.2^2 = 1.44 and .2^2 = .04, so the average of the square distances for this model is (.04 + 1.44 + .04) / 3 = .51.

Thus the best-fit model does give the better result.

We won't go into the reasons here why it is desirable to minimize the square of the distance rather than the distance. When doing eyeball estimates, you don't really need to take this subtlety into account. You can simply try to get is close is possible, on the average, to the points.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q007. If the original data points (1,2), (3, 5), and (6, 6) represent the selling price in dollars of a bag of widgets vs. the number of widgets in the bag, then how much is paid for a bag of 3 widgets? How much would you estimate a bag of 7 widgets would cost?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Price paid for 3 widgets= $4.07

Price paid for 7 widgets= $7.13

confidence rating #$&*:3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

If we use the best-fit function y =.76 x + 1.79, noting that y represents the cost and x the number of widgets, then the cost of 3 widgets is

y = .76 * 3 + 1.79 = 4.07, representing cost of $4.07.

The cost of 7 widgets would be

y = .76 * 7 + 1.79 = 7.11. The cost of 7 widgets would be $7.11.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating: ok

*********************************************

Question: `q008. According to the function y = .8 x + 1.4, how much will a bag of 7 widgets cost? How many widgets would you expect to get for $10?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

7 widgets= $7

$10= 10 ¾ widgets

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Using the model we obtained, y = .8 x + 1.4, we note that the cost is represented by y and the number of widgets by acts. Thus we can find cost of 7 widgets by letting x = 7:

cost = y = .8 * 7 + 1.4 = 7.

To find the number of widgets you can get for $10, let y = 10. Then the equation becomes

10 = .8 x + 1.4.

We easily solve this equation by subtracting 1.4 from both sides than dividing by .8 to obtain x = 10.75. That is, we can buy 10.75 widgets with $10.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

ok

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

*********************************************

Question: `q009. Sketch a graph with the points (5, 7), (8, 8.5) (10, 9) and (12, 12). Sketch the straight line you think best fits the data points.

Extend your line until it intercepts both the x and y axes.

What is your best estimate of the slope of your line?

What is your best estimate of the x intercept of your line?

What is your best estimate of the y intercept of your line?

If your graph represents the cost in dollars of a widget vs. the number of widgets sold, then what is the cost of 4 widgits, and how many widgets could you get for $20?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Slope= .6588

@&

This is accurate to four significant figures. An estimate couldn't be that accurate.

I have no doubt that you could make a sketch and estimate the slope and intercept, so no problem. But be aware that there are many cases where this is preferable to using technology to find the result.

*@

x-intercept at (-5.099,0)

y-intercept at (0,3.359)

cost of 4 widgets= $5.99

$20= 25.2553 widgets

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question: `q010. Plot the three points (1, 2), (2, 3.5) and (3, 4) on a reasonably accurate hand-sketched graph. Sketch a straight line through the first and last points.

What is the distance of each of the three points from the line?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

Sketch a line 1/4 of a unit higher than the line you drew.

What is the distance of each of the three points from the new line?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

Which line is closer to the points, on the average?

For which line is the sum of the squares of the distances less?

How far from the line y = x + 7/6 is each of the three points?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

(1,2) the distance is 0 because you said to make the line pass through the first and last point.

(2,3.5) the distance is found by using the distance formula for the points (2,3.5) and (2 ¼, 3 ¼) (I found this point by finding the line perpendicular to the line that passes through the first and third points. The equation of the line perpendicular to y=-1x+5.5.) By plugging the points into the distance formula which is sqrt((x2-x1)^2+(y2-y1)^2) we get the distance of .3535533. So the point (2,3.5) is .3535533 from the line.

@&

Very good.

I should have asked for the 'vertical distance', which is the distance used in finding the best-fit line. That would have been a lot less work for you.

*@

(3,4) the distance is 0 because you said to make the line pass through the first and last point.

The sum of the differences is .353533

The sum of the squares of the differences is .5945864109

Using the distance formula for these:

Sqrt((1-1)^2+(2 ¼ -2)^2)= 6

Sqrt((2-2)^2+(3.75-3.5)^2)= ¼

Sqrt((3-3)^2+(4 ¼-4)^2)= 12

@&

Sqrt((1-1)^2+(2 ¼ -2)^2)= sqrt( (1/4)^2 ) = 1/4, not 6.

Sqrt((3-3)^2+(4 ¼-4)^2)= 1/4, for reasons similar to the last.

*@

The sum of the differences is 73/4 or 18.25

The sum of the squares of the differences is 36+1/16+144= 2881/16 or180.0625

The first line is closer.

The first line.

Using the distance formula:

(1,2) is 4/25 or .16 from the line

(2,3.5) is also .16

(3,4) is also .16

The sum of the differences is 12/25 or .48

The sum of the squares of the differences is .0768

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

*********************************************

Question: `q009. Sketch a graph with the points (5, 7), (8, 8.5) (10, 9) and (12, 12). Sketch the straight line you think best fits the data points.

Extend your line until it intercepts both the x and y axes.

What is your best estimate of the slope of your line?

What is your best estimate of the x intercept of your line?

What is your best estimate of the y intercept of your line?

If your graph represents the cost in dollars of a widget vs. the number of widgets sold, then what is the cost of 4 widgits, and how many widgets could you get for $20?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Slope= .6588

@&

This is accurate to four significant figures. An estimate couldn't be that accurate.

I have no doubt that you could make a sketch and estimate the slope and intercept, so no problem. But be aware that there are many cases where this is preferable to using technology to find the result.

*@

x-intercept at (-5.099,0)

y-intercept at (0,3.359)

cost of 4 widgets= $5.99

$20= 25.2553 widgets

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question: `q010. Plot the three points (1, 2), (2, 3.5) and (3, 4) on a reasonably accurate hand-sketched graph. Sketch a straight line through the first and last points.

What is the distance of each of the three points from the line?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

Sketch a line 1/4 of a unit higher than the line you drew.

What is the distance of each of the three points from the new line?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

Which line is closer to the points, on the average?

For which line is the sum of the squares of the distances less?

How far from the line y = x + 7/6 is each of the three points?

What is the sum of these distances?

What is the sum of the squares of these distances?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

(1,2) the distance is 0 because you said to make the line pass through the first and last point.

(2,3.5) the distance is found by using the distance formula for the points (2,3.5) and (2 ¼, 3 ¼) (I found this point by finding the line perpendicular to the line that passes through the first and third points. The equation of the line perpendicular to y=-1x+5.5.) By plugging the points into the distance formula which is sqrt((x2-x1)^2+(y2-y1)^2) we get the distance of .3535533. So the point (2,3.5) is .3535533 from the line.

@&

Very good.

I should have asked for the 'vertical distance', which is the distance used in finding the best-fit line. That would have been a lot less work for you.

*@

(3,4) the distance is 0 because you said to make the line pass through the first and last point.

The sum of the differences is .353533

The sum of the squares of the differences is .5945864109

Using the distance formula for these:

Sqrt((1-1)^2+(2 ¼ -2)^2)= 6

Sqrt((2-2)^2+(3.75-3.5)^2)= ¼

Sqrt((3-3)^2+(4 ¼-4)^2)= 12

@&

Sqrt((1-1)^2+(2 ¼ -2)^2)= sqrt( (1/4)^2 ) = 1/4, not 6.

Sqrt((3-3)^2+(4 ¼-4)^2)= 1/4, for reasons similar to the last.

*@

The sum of the differences is 73/4 or 18.25

The sum of the squares of the differences is 36+1/16+144= 2881/16 or180.0625

The first line is closer.

The first line.

Using the distance formula:

(1,2) is 4/25 or .16 from the line

(2,3.5) is also .16

(3,4) is also .16

The sum of the differences is 12/25 or .48

The sum of the squares of the differences is .0768

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

#*&!

&#Your work looks good. See my notes. Let me know if you have any questions. &#