I have been informed that on March 7th from 6:00am to 6:00pm Central Time Lamar University will be doing some maintenance to replace a faulty UPS component and to do this they will be completely powering down their data center.
Unfortunately, this means that the site will be down during this time. I apologize for any inconvenience this might cause.
Paul
February 18, 2026
Section 12.3 : Equations of Planes
7. Determine if the line given by \(\vec r\left( t \right) = \left\langle {4 + t, - 1 + 8t,3 + 2t} \right\rangle \) intersects the plane given by \(2x - y + 3z = 15\) or show that they do not intersect.
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Start SolutionIf the line and the plane do intersect then there must be a value of \(t\) such that if we plug that \(t\) into the equation of the line we’d get a point that lies on the plane. We also know that if a point \(\left( {x,y,z} \right)\) is on the plane the then the coordinates will satisfy the equation of the plane.
Show Step 2If you think about it the coordinates of all the points on the line can be written as,
\[\left( {4 + t, - 1 + 8t,3 + 2t} \right)\]for all values of \(t\).
Show Step 3So, let’s plug the “coordinates” of the points on the line into the equation of the plane to get,
\[2\left( {4 + t} \right) - \left( { - 1 + 8t} \right) + 3\left( {3 + 2t} \right) = 15\] Show Step 4Let’s solve this for \(t\) as follows,
\[18 = 15\,\,??\] Show Step 5Hmmm…
So, either we’ve just managed to prove that 18 and 15 are in fact the same number or there is something else going on here.
Clearly 18 and 15 are not the same number and so something else must be going on. In fact, all this means is that there is no \(t\) that will satisfy the equation we wrote down in Step 3. This in turn means that the line and plane do not intersect.