If $4x^2 + 9y^2 + z^2 = 108$ and $6xy + frac32yz + 2xz = 108$, then find $x^2 + y^2 + z^2$ [on hold]












-3














A CBSE class 9 question:




If
$$4x^2 + 9y^2 + z^2 = 108quadtext{and}quad 6xy + frac32yz + 2xz = 108$$ then
$$x^2 + y^2 + z^2 =,text{?}$$











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Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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put on hold as off-topic by Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan 2 days ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
    – Thomas Shelby
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
    – Ross Millikan
    2 days ago










  • The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
    – bjcolby15
    2 days ago
















-3














A CBSE class 9 question:




If
$$4x^2 + 9y^2 + z^2 = 108quadtext{and}quad 6xy + frac32yz + 2xz = 108$$ then
$$x^2 + y^2 + z^2 =,text{?}$$











share|cite|improve this question









New contributor




Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











put on hold as off-topic by Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan 2 days ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
    – Thomas Shelby
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
    – Ross Millikan
    2 days ago










  • The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
    – bjcolby15
    2 days ago














-3












-3








-3


2





A CBSE class 9 question:




If
$$4x^2 + 9y^2 + z^2 = 108quadtext{and}quad 6xy + frac32yz + 2xz = 108$$ then
$$x^2 + y^2 + z^2 =,text{?}$$











share|cite|improve this question









New contributor




Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











A CBSE class 9 question:




If
$$4x^2 + 9y^2 + z^2 = 108quadtext{and}quad 6xy + frac32yz + 2xz = 108$$ then
$$x^2 + y^2 + z^2 =,text{?}$$








algebra-precalculus






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Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|cite|improve this question









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Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Blue

47.7k870151




47.7k870151






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asked 2 days ago









Aditya SinghAditya Singh

973




973




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New contributor





Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Aditya Singh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




put on hold as off-topic by Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan 2 days ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




put on hold as off-topic by Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan 2 days ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is missing context or other details: Please provide additional context, which ideally explains why the question is relevant to you and our community. Some forms of context include: background and motivation, relevant definitions, source, possible strategies, your current progress, why the question is interesting or important, etc." – Peter, amWhy, Davide Giraudo, Henrik, Ali Caglayan

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
    – Thomas Shelby
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
    – Ross Millikan
    2 days ago










  • The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
    – bjcolby15
    2 days ago


















  • Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
    – Thomas Shelby
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
    – Ross Millikan
    2 days ago










  • The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
    – bjcolby15
    2 days ago
















Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
– Thomas Shelby
2 days ago




Welcome to math.SE!What have you tried?
– Thomas Shelby
2 days ago




1




1




Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
– Ross Millikan
2 days ago




Note that you have only two equations in three unknowns. About the only hope for a single solution is if you can make a sum of squares be zero, which suggests subtracting the two equations. Have you tried that, then writing the left side as a sum of squares? Does it work? Alpha finds a mess of complex solutions
– Ross Millikan
2 days ago












The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
– bjcolby15
2 days ago




The closest solution to this I could find by trial and error is the tuple $[3,2,6]$, but if the second equation were $6xy + 3yz + 2xz = 108$, the tuple would work and $x^2+y^2+z^2 = 3^2 + 2^2 + 6^2 = 9 + 4 + 36 = 49$. Otherwise, the current equations do not have a solution.
– bjcolby15
2 days ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














There is no actual intersection of the two surfaces. Take the two quadratic forms, the Hessian matrix of twice the difference is positive definite, the only (real) point it is zero is the origin, which is not part of either original surface.



$$ H = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & - 12 & - 4 \
- 12 & 36 & - 3 \
- 4 & - 3 & 4 \
end{array}
right)
$$

$$ D_0 = H $$
$$ E_j^T D_{j-1} E_j = D_j $$
$$ P_{j-1} E_j = P_j $$
$$ E_j^{-1} Q_{j-1} = Q_j $$
$$ P_j Q_j = Q_j P_j = I $$
$$ P_j^T H P_j = D_j $$
$$ Q_j^T D_j Q_j = H $$



$$ H = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & - 12 & - 4 \
- 12 & 36 & - 3 \
- 4 & - 3 & 4 \
end{array}
right)
$$



==============================================



$$ E_{1} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
$$

$$ P_{1} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; Q_{1} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; D_{1} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & 0 & - 4 \
0 & 27 & - 6 \
- 4 & - 6 & 4 \
end{array}
right)
$$



==============================================



$$ E_{2} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & 0 & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
$$

$$ P_{2} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; Q_{2} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
0 & 1 & 0 \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; D_{2} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & 0 & 0 \
0 & 27 & - 6 \
0 & - 6 & 3 \
end{array}
right)
$$



==============================================



$$ E_{3} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & 0 & 0 \
0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
$$

$$ P_{3} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; Q_{3} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
, ; ; ; D_{3} = left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & 0 & 0 \
0 & 27 & 0 \
0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
end{array}
right)
$$



==============================================



$$ P^T H P = D $$
$$left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & 0 & 0 \
frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
frac{ 5 }{ 12 } & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
end{array}
right)
left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & - 12 & - 4 \
- 12 & 36 & - 3 \
- 4 & - 3 & 4 \
end{array}
right)
left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
= left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & 0 & 0 \
0 & 27 & 0 \
0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
end{array}
right)
$$

$$ Q^T D Q = H $$
$$left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & 0 & 0 \
- frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
- frac{ 1 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
end{array}
right)
left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & 0 & 0 \
0 & 27 & 0 \
0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
end{array}
right)
left(
begin{array}{rrr}
1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
0 & 0 & 1 \
end{array}
right)
= left(
begin{array}{rrr}
16 & - 12 & - 4 \
- 12 & 36 & - 3 \
- 4 & - 3 & 4 \
end{array}
right)
$$






share|cite|improve this answer































    1














    Perhaps the lazy way to do this:



    enter image description here



    Thus, there is no intersection.






    share|cite|improve this answer




























      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      1














      There is no actual intersection of the two surfaces. Take the two quadratic forms, the Hessian matrix of twice the difference is positive definite, the only (real) point it is zero is the origin, which is not part of either original surface.



      $$ H = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & - 12 & - 4 \
      - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
      - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$

      $$ D_0 = H $$
      $$ E_j^T D_{j-1} E_j = D_j $$
      $$ P_{j-1} E_j = P_j $$
      $$ E_j^{-1} Q_{j-1} = Q_j $$
      $$ P_j Q_j = Q_j P_j = I $$
      $$ P_j^T H P_j = D_j $$
      $$ Q_j^T D_j Q_j = H $$



      $$ H = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & - 12 & - 4 \
      - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
      - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$



      ==============================================



      $$ E_{1} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$

      $$ P_{1} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; Q_{1} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; D_{1} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & 0 & - 4 \
      0 & 27 & - 6 \
      - 4 & - 6 & 4 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$



      ==============================================



      $$ E_{2} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & 0 & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$

      $$ P_{2} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; Q_{2} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
      0 & 1 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; D_{2} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & 0 & 0 \
      0 & 27 & - 6 \
      0 & - 6 & 3 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$



      ==============================================



      $$ E_{3} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & 0 & 0 \
      0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$

      $$ P_{3} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
      0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; Q_{3} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
      0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      , ; ; ; D_{3} = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & 0 & 0 \
      0 & 27 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$



      ==============================================



      $$ P^T H P = D $$
      $$left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & 0 & 0 \
      frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
      frac{ 5 }{ 12 } & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & - 12 & - 4 \
      - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
      - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
      end{array}
      right)
      left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
      0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & 0 & 0 \
      0 & 27 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$

      $$ Q^T D Q = H $$
      $$left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & 0 & 0 \
      - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
      - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & 0 & 0 \
      0 & 27 & 0 \
      0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
      end{array}
      right)
      left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
      0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
      0 & 0 & 1 \
      end{array}
      right)
      = left(
      begin{array}{rrr}
      16 & - 12 & - 4 \
      - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
      - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
      end{array}
      right)
      $$






      share|cite|improve this answer




























        1














        There is no actual intersection of the two surfaces. Take the two quadratic forms, the Hessian matrix of twice the difference is positive definite, the only (real) point it is zero is the origin, which is not part of either original surface.



        $$ H = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & - 12 & - 4 \
        - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
        - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$

        $$ D_0 = H $$
        $$ E_j^T D_{j-1} E_j = D_j $$
        $$ P_{j-1} E_j = P_j $$
        $$ E_j^{-1} Q_{j-1} = Q_j $$
        $$ P_j Q_j = Q_j P_j = I $$
        $$ P_j^T H P_j = D_j $$
        $$ Q_j^T D_j Q_j = H $$



        $$ H = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & - 12 & - 4 \
        - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
        - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$



        ==============================================



        $$ E_{1} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$

        $$ P_{1} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; Q_{1} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; D_{1} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & 0 & - 4 \
        0 & 27 & - 6 \
        - 4 & - 6 & 4 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$



        ==============================================



        $$ E_{2} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & 0 & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$

        $$ P_{2} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; Q_{2} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
        0 & 1 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; D_{2} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & 0 & 0 \
        0 & 27 & - 6 \
        0 & - 6 & 3 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$



        ==============================================



        $$ E_{3} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & 0 & 0 \
        0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$

        $$ P_{3} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
        0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; Q_{3} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
        0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        , ; ; ; D_{3} = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & 0 & 0 \
        0 & 27 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$



        ==============================================



        $$ P^T H P = D $$
        $$left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & 0 & 0 \
        frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
        frac{ 5 }{ 12 } & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & - 12 & - 4 \
        - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
        - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
        end{array}
        right)
        left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
        0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & 0 & 0 \
        0 & 27 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$

        $$ Q^T D Q = H $$
        $$left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & 0 & 0 \
        - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
        - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & 0 & 0 \
        0 & 27 & 0 \
        0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
        end{array}
        right)
        left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
        0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
        0 & 0 & 1 \
        end{array}
        right)
        = left(
        begin{array}{rrr}
        16 & - 12 & - 4 \
        - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
        - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
        end{array}
        right)
        $$






        share|cite|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1






          There is no actual intersection of the two surfaces. Take the two quadratic forms, the Hessian matrix of twice the difference is positive definite, the only (real) point it is zero is the origin, which is not part of either original surface.



          $$ H = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ D_0 = H $$
          $$ E_j^T D_{j-1} E_j = D_j $$
          $$ P_{j-1} E_j = P_j $$
          $$ E_j^{-1} Q_{j-1} = Q_j $$
          $$ P_j Q_j = Q_j P_j = I $$
          $$ P_j^T H P_j = D_j $$
          $$ Q_j^T D_j Q_j = H $$



          $$ H = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & - 4 \
          0 & 27 & - 6 \
          - 4 & - 6 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & - 6 \
          0 & - 6 & 3 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ P^T H P = D $$
          $$left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
          frac{ 5 }{ 12 } & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ Q^T D Q = H $$
          $$left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
          - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$






          share|cite|improve this answer














          There is no actual intersection of the two surfaces. Take the two quadratic forms, the Hessian matrix of twice the difference is positive definite, the only (real) point it is zero is the origin, which is not part of either original surface.



          $$ H = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ D_0 = H $$
          $$ E_j^T D_{j-1} E_j = D_j $$
          $$ P_{j-1} E_j = P_j $$
          $$ E_j^{-1} Q_{j-1} = Q_j $$
          $$ P_j Q_j = Q_j P_j = I $$
          $$ P_j^T H P_j = D_j $$
          $$ Q_j^T D_j Q_j = H $$



          $$ H = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 0 \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{1} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & - 4 \
          0 & 27 & - 6 \
          - 4 & - 6 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{2} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & - 6 \
          0 & - 6 & 3 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ E_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ P_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; Q_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          , ; ; ; D_{3} = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$



          ==============================================



          $$ P^T H P = D $$
          $$left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
          frac{ 5 }{ 12 } & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & frac{ 5 }{ 12 } \
          0 & 1 & frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$

          $$ Q^T D Q = H $$
          $$left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & 0 & 0 \
          - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & 1 & 0 \
          - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & 0 & 0 \
          0 & 27 & 0 \
          0 & 0 & frac{ 5 }{ 3 } \
          end{array}
          right)
          left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          1 & - frac{ 3 }{ 4 } & - frac{ 1 }{ 4 } \
          0 & 1 & - frac{ 2 }{ 9 } \
          0 & 0 & 1 \
          end{array}
          right)
          = left(
          begin{array}{rrr}
          16 & - 12 & - 4 \
          - 12 & 36 & - 3 \
          - 4 & - 3 & 4 \
          end{array}
          right)
          $$







          share|cite|improve this answer














          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer








          edited 2 days ago

























          answered 2 days ago









          Will JagyWill Jagy

          102k599199




          102k599199























              1














              Perhaps the lazy way to do this:



              enter image description here



              Thus, there is no intersection.






              share|cite|improve this answer


























                1














                Perhaps the lazy way to do this:



                enter image description here



                Thus, there is no intersection.






                share|cite|improve this answer
























                  1












                  1








                  1






                  Perhaps the lazy way to do this:



                  enter image description here



                  Thus, there is no intersection.






                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  Perhaps the lazy way to do this:



                  enter image description here



                  Thus, there is no intersection.







                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  answered 2 days ago









                  glowstonetreesglowstonetrees

                  2,305318




                  2,305318















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