Intermediate

Solving Equations and Simultaneous Equations

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·6 min
A17·A18·A19·A20

Solving Linear Equations

A linear equation has the variable to the first power only. Solve by performing inverse operations to isolate the variable.

Single-sided:

Unknown on both sides — collect variable terms on one side:

With fractions — multiply through by the LCM of denominators:

With brackets — expand first:

Solving Quadratic Equations — Factorising

A quadratic equation has the form . The standard method at Foundation tier is factorising.

Method:

  1. Rearrange so one side equals zero.
  2. Factorise the left side.
  3. Set each factor equal to zero.
  4. Solve each resulting linear equation.

Worked example — solve :

Worked example — solve (Higher):

Factorise (AC method): ; two numbers multiplying to and adding to : and .

The Quadratic Formula and Completing the Square (Higher)

When a quadratic does not factorise neatly, use the quadratic formula:

Worked example — solve (give answers to 2 d.p.):

The discriminant tells you how many real roots exist:

  • : two distinct real roots
  • : one repeated root
  • : no real roots

Solving by completing the square:

Approximate Solutions from Graphs (A17 / A18)

When an equation cannot be solved exactly by inspection, or when the question asks for an estimate, graph intersection provides approximate solutions.

Method — solving graphically: plot both and on the same axes. The -coordinates of the intersection points are the approximate solutions.

Worked example — linear equation from a graph (A17):

To solve , plot and . The lines cross at , so .

This matches the algebraic solution:

Worked example — quadratic from a graph (A18):

To solve approximately, plot . Read off where the graph crosses the -axis (where ).

Reading from the graph: or (to 1 d.p.)

Alternatively, rearrange to , plot and , and read the -coordinates of the intersections.

Worked example — simultaneous equations from a graph (A19):

To solve and simultaneously, plot both lines. They intersect at approximately , giving , .

Algebraic check: ✓ and ✓. The intersection point is the exact solution.

Key exam skill: read -values at intersections or axis crossings to 1 decimal place unless the question specifies otherwise. Show which graph you are reading from and label the intersection.

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Simultaneous Equations — Elimination and Substitution

Two simultaneous equations are solved when values of and satisfy both at once.

Elimination method — multiply equations to match coefficients, then add or subtract:

Worked example — solve and :

Add: . Substitute: . Solution:

Check in both: ✓;

Substitution method:

Worked example — solve and :

Substitute into the second:

. Solution:

Linear-Quadratic Simultaneous Equations (Higher)

When one equation is quadratic, use substitution to reduce to a single quadratic.

Worked example — solve and :

Solutions: and

Geometrically, these are the intersection points of a line and a parabola.

Iteration (Higher)

Iteration finds approximate solutions to equations numerically by repeatedly applying a rearrangement of the equation.

Method: rearrange the equation into the form . Starting from an initial estimate , compute , then , and so on. The sequence converges to the root.

Worked example — show that can be rearranged to , and use iteration with to find the root to 3 s.f.

Rearrangement:

— converging to (3 s.f.) ✓

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Not rearranging to zero before factorising a quadratic

must be rearranged to before factorising. Factorising only works when one side equals zero.

2. Simultaneous equations — arithmetic error after elimination

After finding one variable, substitute back into one of the original equations (not a derived equation) and check the answer in the other equation.

3. Quadratic formula — sign error with

gives two solutions. Writing only the case means the second solution is missed — common when a question asks for two answers.

4. Linear-quadratic — expecting only one solution

A line can intersect a parabola at 0, 1, or 2 points. Unless the discriminant is zero or the equations produce an impossible result, there are usually two solution pairs to find and state.

MistakeCorrection
" has only solution "Factorise: ; solutions and — don't divide both sides by
"Solve : " (both square roots: and )
"Iteration diverges, so the formula is wrong"If iteration diverges, try a different rearrangement of the equation

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Inequalities and Forming Equations

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