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Mymaths Quadratic Simultaneous Equations Help!
9 Answers
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The link to the questions is above, I desperately need help with the answers I already completed the first part but Im stuck on all of these and I've been at it for hours, since I have no one else to ask for help Im hoping that someone can help me Please
The link to the questions is above, I desperately need help with the answers I already completed the first part but Im stuck on all of these and I've been at it for hours, since I have no one else to ask for help Im hoping that someone can help me Please
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.in each case, rearrange the 2nd equation to be of the form y = ax+b
then substitute that value of y in the 1st equation, expand the terms and rearrange so that you have a quadratic in x of the form ax² + bx + c = 0 (not the same a and b from the first step)
then use the standard solution for x in such a quadratic
then substitute that value of y in the 1st equation, expand the terms and rearrange so that you have a quadratic in x of the form ax² + bx + c = 0 (not the same a and b from the first step)
then use the standard solution for x in such a quadratic
Quadratic equations have zero, one, or two real solutions - in this case that will mean zero, one or two crossing points. So if x=1 and y=6 is one solution, there may be another. Hence the second set of brackets.
Bibblebub has described the method well -- if you still need help silver then I'll try to make a more detailed post later.
Bibblebub has described the method well -- if you still need help silver then I'll try to make a more detailed post later.
All the x² + y² equations are circles and the y=x ones straight lines so the line may cut the circle in 2 places. As said you need to substitute the y value (for example) into the quadratic and the solve for x getting 2 values for x and then substituting these values back to find the y giving you 2 sets of co-ordinates.
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