Answer:
[tex]\text{D. }\left[\begin{array}{cc}0&4\\-6&1\\3&-4\end{array}\right][/tex]
Step-by-step explanation:
It would be helpful to know the numbers of rows and columns, so we don't have to guess.
Any number of on-line calculators and/or graphing calculators can multiply these matrices for you. Excel and other spreadsheets can do this, too. Forming the 6 sums of 2 products is tedious to do by hand.
For example, the term in the product matrix at row 1 column 2 is the sum of products of the numbers in row 1 of the first matrix and column 2 of the second matrix:
4·1 + 0·1 = 4
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The attachment shows the matrix multiplication on a TI-84 calculator.