Simultaneous Equation

TheRedAndGreenBeast

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Doing some revision for GCSE maths and this question came up. I've spent a while trying to figure it out but with little success. I've tried x = ±3 y = 0 but then that would not be true for x + y = 2.

x^2 + y^2 = 9
x + y = 2

x = ? or ?
y = ? or ?

Give answer to 2 decimal places. Please show working out so I will learn how to do it.

If you can give me the answer I'll be your best friend! =D
 

TheRedAndGreenBeast

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I think I may have worked it out but I'm not sure if I'm correct or not; can somebody check this out?

x + y = 2
x = 2 - y
(2 - y)^(2) + y^2 = 9
4 - 2y + 2y + y^2 + y^2 = 9
2y^2 = 9
y^2 = 4.5
y = ±2.12 (to 2 decimal places)

4.5 is half of 9 so x^2 must be 4.5 as well meaning x = 2.12 as well (if this is correct).

EDIT: Actually, if x + y = 2 then the answer can't be 2.12...
 
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Flakez

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Use quadratic formula
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Remember the +/- sign should be -/+ but the symbol doesn't exist here.
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TheRedAndGreenBeast

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Forgot to use this formula lol thanks for reminding me.
 

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What kind of sorcery is this? :mad:_@:
 

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How... are you having problems with this? Unless you are in lower grades and I don't know what GSCE is (I'm Canadian). Isolate for y by rearranging the equation and getting y = 2-x. That is your y value. Sub it in the to the equation and then expand it and subsequently collect like terms until you have gotten a simplified expression. Most likely, the equation will stop there and you will be left with a trinomial. Since you have that, you must use the quadratic formula. Plug in the respective a b and c values and your two x values are the answers to your question.
 

Shinichi Izumi

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How... are you having problems with this? Unless you are in lower grades and I don't know what GSCE is (I'm Canadian). Isolate for y by rearranging the equation and getting y = 2-x. That is your y value. Sub it in the to the equation and then expand it and subsequently collect like terms until you have gotten a simplified expression. Most likely, the equation will stop there and you will be left with a trinomial. Since you have that, you must use the quadratic formula. Plug in the respective a b and c values and your two x values are the answers to your question.
Remember that not everyone is as skillful as you in math ^.^
 

EnDash

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How... are you having problems with this? Unless you are in lower grades and I don't know what GSCE is (I'm Canadian). Isolate for y by rearranging the equation and getting y = 2-x. That is your y value. Sub it in the to the equation and then expand it and subsequently collect like terms until you have gotten a simplified expression. Most likely, the equation will stop there and you will be left with a trinomial. Since you have that, you must use the quadratic formula. Plug in the respective a b and c values and your two x values are the answers to your question.
are you trying to help him or discourage him?

OP: you can prove this is correct by checking with the original formula:
1 + sqrt(14) / 2 ≈ 2.87
1 - sqrt(14) / 2 ≈ -0.87

x + y = 2 -> 2.87 + -0.87 = 2 so it's correct here

the other one is only correct if you use the full value, my calculator gives me:

x = 1 + sqrt(14) / 2 = 2.8708286933869706927918743661583
y = 1 - sqrt(14) / 2 = -0.87082869338697069279187436615827

x^2 + y^2 = 9 -> 8.2416573867739413855837487323167 + 0.75834261322605861441625126768344 = 9 so it's correct here as well

it's a little inaccurate in the calculator but you get the idea. i'm sure you know already how to do this but it's good to check whenever you can.
 
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