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x+3y=0
Consider the second equation. Combine 4y and -y to get 3y.
y+\frac{1}{2}x=0,3y+x=0
To solve a pair of equations using substitution, first solve one of the equations for one of the variables. Then substitute the result for that variable in the other equation.
y+\frac{1}{2}x=0
Choose one of the equations and solve it for y by isolating y on the left hand side of the equal sign.
y=-\frac{1}{2}x
Subtract \frac{x}{2} from both sides of the equation.
3\left(-\frac{1}{2}\right)x+x=0
Substitute -\frac{x}{2} for y in the other equation, 3y+x=0.
-\frac{3}{2}x+x=0
Multiply 3 times -\frac{x}{2}.
-\frac{1}{2}x=0
Add -\frac{3x}{2} to x.
x=0
Multiply both sides by -2.
y=0
Substitute 0 for x in y=-\frac{1}{2}x. Because the resulting equation contains only one variable, you can solve for y directly.
y=0,x=0
The system is now solved.
x+3y=0
Consider the second equation. Combine 4y and -y to get 3y.
y+\frac{1}{2}x=0,3y+x=0
Put the equations in standard form and then use matrices to solve the system of equations.
\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right)\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
Write the equations in matrix form.
inverse(\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right))\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right)\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=inverse(\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right))\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
Left multiply the equation by the inverse matrix of \left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right).
\left(\begin{matrix}1&0\\0&1\end{matrix}\right)\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=inverse(\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right))\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
The product of a matrix and its inverse is the identity matrix.
\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=inverse(\left(\begin{matrix}1&\frac{1}{2}\\3&1\end{matrix}\right))\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
Multiply the matrices on the left hand side of the equal sign.
\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=\left(\begin{matrix}\frac{1}{1-\frac{1}{2}\times 3}&-\frac{\frac{1}{2}}{1-\frac{1}{2}\times 3}\\-\frac{3}{1-\frac{1}{2}\times 3}&\frac{1}{1-\frac{1}{2}\times 3}\end{matrix}\right)\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
For the 2\times 2 matrix \left(\begin{matrix}a&b\\c&d\end{matrix}\right), the inverse matrix is \left(\begin{matrix}\frac{d}{ad-bc}&\frac{-b}{ad-bc}\\\frac{-c}{ad-bc}&\frac{a}{ad-bc}\end{matrix}\right), so the matrix equation can be rewritten as a matrix multiplication problem.
\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=\left(\begin{matrix}-2&1\\6&-2\end{matrix}\right)\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
Do the arithmetic.
\left(\begin{matrix}y\\x\end{matrix}\right)=\left(\begin{matrix}0\\0\end{matrix}\right)
Multiply the matrices.
y=0,x=0
Extract the matrix elements y and x.
x+3y=0
Consider the second equation. Combine 4y and -y to get 3y.
y+\frac{1}{2}x=0,3y+x=0
In order to solve by elimination, coefficients of one of the variables must be the same in both equations so that the variable will cancel out when one equation is subtracted from the other.
3y+3\times \frac{1}{2}x=0,3y+x=0
To make y and 3y equal, multiply all terms on each side of the first equation by 3 and all terms on each side of the second by 1.
3y+\frac{3}{2}x=0,3y+x=0
Simplify.
3y-3y+\frac{3}{2}x-x=0
Subtract 3y+x=0 from 3y+\frac{3}{2}x=0 by subtracting like terms on each side of the equal sign.
\frac{3}{2}x-x=0
Add 3y to -3y. Terms 3y and -3y cancel out, leaving an equation with only one variable that can be solved.
\frac{1}{2}x=0
Add \frac{3x}{2} to -x.
x=0
Multiply both sides by 2.
3y=0
Substitute 0 for x in 3y+x=0. Because the resulting equation contains only one variable, you can solve for y directly.
y=0
Divide both sides by 3.
y=0,x=0
The system is now solved.