How do you find the slope of a line perpendicular to 3x+y=15?

1 Answer
Jun 17, 2015

Subtracting 3x from both sides you get: y=3x+15, which is in standard slope-intercept form, with slope m=3.

Any line perpendicular to it will have slope 1m=13

Explanation:

Either just use the answer above, asserting the 1m formula, or show it geometrically as follows:

Starting with 3x+y=15, first reflect the line in the 45o line x=y, by swapping x and y...

3y+x=15

Then reflect in the y axis by reversing the sign of x

3yx=15

These two geometric steps are equivalent to rotating by a right angle centred on the origin.

Next add x to both sides to get:

3y=x+15

Finally divide both sides by 3 to get:

y=13x+5

This is in slope-intercept format with slope 13