Lesson 39: Slope-Intercept Form: The Line as a Function

The Standard Recipe

Most lines in algebra are written in Slope-Intercept Form. This allows us to see the "starting point" and the "speed" of the line immediately.

\[y = mx + b\]

Worked Examples

Example 1: Graphing from an Equation

Graph \(y = 2x - 3\).

Example 2: Equation from a Graph

A line crosses the y-axis at 5 and has a slope of -1/2. What is its equation?

Example 3: Transforming to Standard Form

Convert \(2x + 3y = 12\) to slope-intercept form.

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In physics, many basic laws are "Linear Relationships." For example, the energy of a photon \(E = hf\) is a line with slope \(h\) and intercept \(0\). The relationship between stopping voltage and frequency in the photoelectric effect is also a straight line. By measuring the slope and intercept of experimental data on a Cartesian plane, physicists like Millikan were able to calculate the value of Planck's constant for the first time. The "Slope" of the universe is where the fundamental constants are hidden.