Remember, the idea is to have the SAME variable
missing in two equations, not just to eliminate
any variable you can.
You should start either of the following two
ways, but not the way you started.
1. Take advantage of the fact that y is already
missing in the 1st equation. To do so, use the other
two equations, 2nd and 3rd, to get another
equation with y missing. Then solve that with
the 1st.
or
2. Take advantage of the fact that x is already
missing in the 2nd equation. To do so, use the other
two equations, 1st and 3rd, to get another
equation with x missing. Then solve that with
the 2nd.
I'll arbitrarily choose the first way.
Since y is already eliminated in the first equation,
let's put it aside for now, and use only the other two
equations to eliminate y, the same variable that is
missing in the first.
We'll write
as
Remember we want to eliminate y, so we multiply
the upper equation through by
and add
it to the lower equation:
We add term by term and get
Now we go back and get the very first original
equation which we put aside,
We put it together with the one we just found
and now we have a system of two equations with
the SAME missing variable, y.
Now we eliminate
by multiplying the
upper equation through by -2, and adding:
and get
Substitute this into
Now substitute these values in either one of the
original equations which contains
. The
simpler one is
So the solution is
,
,
Edwin