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Advanced Math · Absolute Value Equations

SAT Absolute Value Equations Practice Questions (Free + Explanations) | Quiz 8

Question 12345 of 5

Question 1 of 5

Given that the expression is equal to a constant for every value of in the interval , which expression is equivalent to for every in that same interval?

Explanation

On the interval , the quantity , so . Also, , so . Therefore,

so .

Now rewrite the target expression on the same interval. Since and ,

Also, . So

Because , this becomes

So the equivalent expression is .

Concept summary

For absolute value expressions, first use the given interval to determine the sign of each inside expression. Then remove the absolute value bars piece by piece and simplify.

Question 2 of 5

For real numbers and , suppose the equation

is true for every real number in the interval . Which statement must be true?

Explanation

The expression represents the sum of the distances from to and on a number line. A key fact is that for any between and , this sum is constant and equals . Since the equation is true for every in the entire interval , every value of from to must lie between and . Therefore, the whole interval is contained between and , and the constant value of the sum on that interval must be . Because the given sum equals for all those , it follows that

This must be true.

Concept summary

For points and on a number line, the sum is constant exactly when stays between them, and that constant is .

Question 3 of 5

A research station tracks the position of a submersible along a straight underwater cable. Position is measured in meters relative to the station, so positions to the east are positive and positions to the west are negative. At one moment, the submersible is meters from a sensor located at , and at the same moment it is meters farther from a second sensor located at than it is from the first sensor. Which equation could be used to find all possible positions of the submersible?

Explanation

Distance from the submersible at position to the sensor at is . Since the submersible is meters from that sensor, one condition is . The second sensor is at , so its distance from the submersible is . The problem says this distance is meters greater than the distance to the first sensor, so , which is equivalent to . Therefore the system that models the situation is and .

Concept summary

For positions on a number line, distance between and a point is modeled by . In word problems, translate each distance statement carefully and keep separate conditions as a system when needed.

Question 4 of 5

A hiker is walking along a straight trail. A sign marks a campsite at mile 12. The hiker is currently 5 miles away from the campsite. Which equation can be used to find all possible positions of the hiker on the trail?

Explanation

Distance on a number line is represented by absolute value. Since the campsite is at mile 12 and the hiker is 5 miles away, the distance between the hiker's position and 12 is 5. That gives the equation . This equation has two solutions, and , which makes sense because the hiker could be 5 miles to the right or 5 miles to the left of the campsite.

Concept summary

Absolute value equations model distance on a number line. If a point is a certain distance from a known location, write that as the absolute value of their difference.

Question 5 of 5

A laboratory calibrates a sensor so that the reading must satisfy . What is the sum of all possible values of ?

Explanation

The equation means the distance between and is . So or . Solving gives or . The sum of all possible values is , so the correct answer is .

Concept summary

An equation of the form has two solutions when : and . If the problem asks for a sum, find both solutions first and then add them.

Your results

0of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

500-550

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

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Your results

1of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

500-550

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

2of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

600-650

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

3of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

600-650

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

4of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

700+

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

5of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

700+

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice