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DS Question

by vinay1983 » Thu Aug 22, 2013 5:34 am
In the xy-plane, at what two points does the graph y=(x+a)(x+b) intersect the x-axis?
(1) a+b=−6

(2) The graph contains the point (0,−7).

I do not know how to solve this.i cannot even guess.
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Thu Aug 22, 2013 5:48 am
vinay1983 wrote:In the xy-plane, at what two points does the graph y = (x+a)(x+b) intersect the x-axis?
(1) a + b = −6

(2) The graph contains the point (0,−7).
Target question: At which two points of the graph does y = (x+a)(x+b) intersect the x-axis?

IMPORTANT: Let's examine the point where a line (or curve) crosses the x-axis. At the point of intersection, the point is on the x-axis, which means that the y-coordinate of that point is 0.
So, for example, to find the point where the line y = 2x+3 crosses the x-axis, we let y =0 and solve for x.
We get: 0 = 2x+3
When we solve this for x, we get x = -3/2.
So, the line y=2x+3 crosses the x-axis at (-3/2, 0)

Likewise, to determine the point where y = (x + a)(x + b) crosses the x axis, let y=0 and solve for x.
We get: 0 = (x + a)(x + b), which means x = -a or x = -b
This means that y = (x + a)(x + b) crosses the x axis at (-a, 0) and (-b, 0)
So, to solve this question, we need the values of a and b

Aside: y = (x + a)(x + b) is actually a parabola. This explains why it crosses the x axis at two points.

Now let's rephrase the target question:
Rephrased target question: What are the values of a and b?

Statement 1: a + b = -6
There's no way we can use this to determine the values of a and b.
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: The graph contains the point (0,-7)
So, when x = 0, y = -7
When we plug x = 0 and y = -7 into the given equation, we get -7 = (0 + a)(0 + b), which tells us that ab = -7
So, statement 2 is a fancy way of telling us that ab = -7
Since there's no way we can use this information to determine the values of a and b, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statements 1 and 2 combined:
Statement 1 tells us that a+b = -6
Statement 2 tells us that ab = -7

In our heads we can see that there are two possible solutions:
- solution a: a = -7 and b = 1
- solution b: a = 1 and b = -7
So, the original equation is either y = (x - 7)(x + 1) or y = (x + 1)(x - 7). Of course, these two equations are the same, and they're both such that the two points of intersection are (7, 0) and (-1, 0)
Since we can answer the target question with certainty, the combined statements are SUFFICIENT

Answer = C

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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