Solve for y
y=\frac{1}{2}=0.5
y=3
Graph
Share
Copied to clipboard
a+b=-7 ab=2\times 3=6
To solve the equation, factor the left hand side by grouping. First, left hand side needs to be rewritten as 2y^{2}+ay+by+3. To find a and b, set up a system to be solved.
-1,-6 -2,-3
Since ab is positive, a and b have the same sign. Since a+b is negative, a and b are both negative. List all such integer pairs that give product 6.
-1-6=-7 -2-3=-5
Calculate the sum for each pair.
a=-6 b=-1
The solution is the pair that gives sum -7.
\left(2y^{2}-6y\right)+\left(-y+3\right)
Rewrite 2y^{2}-7y+3 as \left(2y^{2}-6y\right)+\left(-y+3\right).
2y\left(y-3\right)-\left(y-3\right)
Factor out 2y in the first and -1 in the second group.
\left(y-3\right)\left(2y-1\right)
Factor out common term y-3 by using distributive property.
y=3 y=\frac{1}{2}
To find equation solutions, solve y-3=0 and 2y-1=0.
2y^{2}-7y+3=0
All equations of the form ax^{2}+bx+c=0 can be solved using the quadratic formula: \frac{-b±\sqrt{b^{2}-4ac}}{2a}. The quadratic formula gives two solutions, one when ± is addition and one when it is subtraction.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±\sqrt{\left(-7\right)^{2}-4\times 2\times 3}}{2\times 2}
This equation is in standard form: ax^{2}+bx+c=0. Substitute 2 for a, -7 for b, and 3 for c in the quadratic formula, \frac{-b±\sqrt{b^{2}-4ac}}{2a}.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±\sqrt{49-4\times 2\times 3}}{2\times 2}
Square -7.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±\sqrt{49-8\times 3}}{2\times 2}
Multiply -4 times 2.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±\sqrt{49-24}}{2\times 2}
Multiply -8 times 3.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±\sqrt{25}}{2\times 2}
Add 49 to -24.
y=\frac{-\left(-7\right)±5}{2\times 2}
Take the square root of 25.
y=\frac{7±5}{2\times 2}
The opposite of -7 is 7.
y=\frac{7±5}{4}
Multiply 2 times 2.
y=\frac{12}{4}
Now solve the equation y=\frac{7±5}{4} when ± is plus. Add 7 to 5.
y=3
Divide 12 by 4.
y=\frac{2}{4}
Now solve the equation y=\frac{7±5}{4} when ± is minus. Subtract 5 from 7.
y=\frac{1}{2}
Reduce the fraction \frac{2}{4} to lowest terms by extracting and canceling out 2.
y=3 y=\frac{1}{2}
The equation is now solved.
2y^{2}-7y+3=0
Quadratic equations such as this one can be solved by completing the square. In order to complete the square, the equation must first be in the form x^{2}+bx=c.
2y^{2}-7y+3-3=-3
Subtract 3 from both sides of the equation.
2y^{2}-7y=-3
Subtracting 3 from itself leaves 0.
\frac{2y^{2}-7y}{2}=-\frac{3}{2}
Divide both sides by 2.
y^{2}-\frac{7}{2}y=-\frac{3}{2}
Dividing by 2 undoes the multiplication by 2.
y^{2}-\frac{7}{2}y+\left(-\frac{7}{4}\right)^{2}=-\frac{3}{2}+\left(-\frac{7}{4}\right)^{2}
Divide -\frac{7}{2}, the coefficient of the x term, by 2 to get -\frac{7}{4}. Then add the square of -\frac{7}{4} to both sides of the equation. This step makes the left hand side of the equation a perfect square.
y^{2}-\frac{7}{2}y+\frac{49}{16}=-\frac{3}{2}+\frac{49}{16}
Square -\frac{7}{4} by squaring both the numerator and the denominator of the fraction.
y^{2}-\frac{7}{2}y+\frac{49}{16}=\frac{25}{16}
Add -\frac{3}{2} to \frac{49}{16} by finding a common denominator and adding the numerators. Then reduce the fraction to lowest terms if possible.
\left(y-\frac{7}{4}\right)^{2}=\frac{25}{16}
Factor y^{2}-\frac{7}{2}y+\frac{49}{16}. In general, when x^{2}+bx+c is a perfect square, it can always be factored as \left(x+\frac{b}{2}\right)^{2}.
\sqrt{\left(y-\frac{7}{4}\right)^{2}}=\sqrt{\frac{25}{16}}
Take the square root of both sides of the equation.
y-\frac{7}{4}=\frac{5}{4} y-\frac{7}{4}=-\frac{5}{4}
Simplify.
y=3 y=\frac{1}{2}
Add \frac{7}{4} to both sides of the equation.
x ^ 2 -\frac{7}{2}x +\frac{3}{2} = 0
Quadratic equations such as this one can be solved by a new direct factoring method that does not require guess work. To use the direct factoring method, the equation must be in the form x^2+Bx+C=0.This is achieved by dividing both sides of the equation by 2
r + s = \frac{7}{2} rs = \frac{3}{2}
Let r and s be the factors for the quadratic equation such that x^2+Bx+C=(x−r)(x−s) where sum of factors (r+s)=−B and the product of factors rs = C
r = \frac{7}{4} - u s = \frac{7}{4} + u
Two numbers r and s sum up to \frac{7}{2} exactly when the average of the two numbers is \frac{1}{2}*\frac{7}{2} = \frac{7}{4}. You can also see that the midpoint of r and s corresponds to the axis of symmetry of the parabola represented by the quadratic equation y=x^2+Bx+C. The values of r and s are equidistant from the center by an unknown quantity u. Express r and s with respect to variable u. <div style='padding: 8px'><img src='https://opalmath.azureedge.net/customsolver/quadraticgraph.png' style='width: 100%;max-width: 700px' /></div>
(\frac{7}{4} - u) (\frac{7}{4} + u) = \frac{3}{2}
To solve for unknown quantity u, substitute these in the product equation rs = \frac{3}{2}
\frac{49}{16} - u^2 = \frac{3}{2}
Simplify by expanding (a -b) (a + b) = a^2 – b^2
-u^2 = \frac{3}{2}-\frac{49}{16} = -\frac{25}{16}
Simplify the expression by subtracting \frac{49}{16} on both sides
u^2 = \frac{25}{16} u = \pm\sqrt{\frac{25}{16}} = \pm \frac{5}{4}
Simplify the expression by multiplying -1 on both sides and take the square root to obtain the value of unknown variable u
r =\frac{7}{4} - \frac{5}{4} = 0.500 s = \frac{7}{4} + \frac{5}{4} = 3
The factors r and s are the solutions to the quadratic equation. Substitute the value of u to compute the r and s.
Examples
Quadratic equation
{ x } ^ { 2 } - 4 x - 5 = 0
Trigonometry
4 \sin \theta \cos \theta = 2 \sin \theta
Linear equation
y = 3x + 4
Arithmetic
699 * 533
Matrix
\left[ \begin{array} { l l } { 2 } & { 3 } \\ { 5 } & { 4 } \end{array} \right] \left[ \begin{array} { l l l } { 2 } & { 0 } & { 3 } \\ { -1 } & { 1 } & { 5 } \end{array} \right]
Simultaneous equation
\left. \begin{cases} { 8x+2y = 46 } \\ { 7x+3y = 47 } \end{cases} \right.
Differentiation
\frac { d } { d x } \frac { ( 3 x ^ { 2 } - 2 ) } { ( x - 5 ) }
Integration
\int _ { 0 } ^ { 1 } x e ^ { - x ^ { 2 } } d x
Limits
\lim _{x \rightarrow-3} \frac{x^{2}-9}{x^{2}+2 x-3}