Non Linear Equations in One Variable and System of Equations in Two Variables Pattern - Solve Nonlinear Equations

Digital SAT® Math — Non Linear Equations in One Variable and System of Equations in Two Variables

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Solving Nonlinear Equations

 

This pattern covers solving quadratic equations, absolute value equations, and rational equations. The SAT loves asking for a specific solution (the positive one, the negative one) or the sum of all solutions. Knowing shortcuts like Vieta's formulas can save significant time.

 

The Core Techniques

Quadratic equations: Get to $ax^2 + bx + c = 0$, then factor or use the quadratic formula $x = \dfrac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^2 - 4ac}}{2a}$.

Sum of solutions shortcut (Vieta's): For $ax^2 + bx + c = 0$, the sum of the two solutions is $-\dfrac{b}{a}$. You don't need to find each root individually.

Absolute value equations: $|E| = k$ splits into $E = k$ or $E = -k$ (when $k \geq 0$).

Rational equations: Multiply both sides by the denominator to clear the fraction, then solve the resulting polynomial.

 

Worked Examples

 

Example 1. $|y - 15| = 22$. What is the positive solution?

A) $7$
B) $22$
C) $37$
D) $-7$

Split: $y - 15 = 22$ → $y = 37$, or $y - 15 = -22$ → $y = -7$.
The positive solution is $37$.
Gotcha: Option D ($-7$) is the negative solution. Read carefully whether the question asks for the positive or negative one.
The answer is C.

 

Example 2. $|2x + 5| - 8 = 11$. What is the sum of the solutions?

First isolate the absolute value: $|2x + 5| = 19$.
Split: $2x + 5 = 19$ → $x = 7$, or $2x + 5 = -19$ → $x = -12$.
Sum: $7 + (-12) = -5$
Shortcut: For $|2x + 5| = k$, the two solutions are symmetric around $x = -\dfrac{5}{2}$. The sum is always $2 \times \left(-\dfrac{5}{2}\right) = -5$, regardless of $k$.
The answer is $-5$.

 

Example 3. $2k^2 = 12k - 3$. What is the sum of the solutions?

A) $12$
B) $\dfrac{3}{2}$
C) $-6$
D) $6$

Rearrange to standard form: $2k^2 - 12k + 3 = 0$.
Use Vieta's: sum $= -\dfrac{b}{a} = -\dfrac{-12}{2} = 6$.
Gotcha: Option A ($12$) forgets the negative sign in $-b/a$. Option B ($3/2$) gives $c/a$, which is the product of the roots, not the sum. Option C ($-6$) drops the negative: $-(-12)/2 = +6$, not $-6$.
The answer is D.

 

Example 4. $x - 4 = \dfrac{21}{x}$. What is the positive solution?

Multiply both sides by $x$: $x^2 - 4x = 21$
$x^2 - 4x - 21 = 0$
Factor: $(x - 7)(x + 3) = 0$, so $x = 7$ or $x = -3$.
The positive solution is $7$.
Gotcha: After clearing the fraction, don't forget you've introduced the possibility of $x = 0$ as extraneous. Here neither solution is zero, so both are valid. But always check that your solution doesn't make the original denominator zero.
The answer is $7$.

 

Example 5. $x^2 + 5x - 14 = 0$. What is a solution?

Factor: $(x + 7)(x - 2) = 0$, so $x = -7$ or $x = 2$.
If the question asks "what is a solution," either one works. Look at the answer choices and pick whichever appears.

 

Example 6. $(x - 3)^2 = 49$. What are the solutions?

Take the square root of both sides: $x - 3 = \pm 7$
$x = 3 + 7 = 10$ or $x = 3 - 7 = -4$
Gotcha: Don't forget the $\pm$. If you only write $x - 3 = 7$, you miss $x = -4$.

 

Example 7. $4x^2 - 12x + 9 = 0$. How many solutions does this have, and what is the sum?

Recognize this as $(2x - 3)^2 = 0$, so $x = \dfrac{3}{2}$ is the only solution (repeated root).
Sum of solutions: $\dfrac{3}{2}$ (just the one value).
You can verify: $-\dfrac{b}{a} = -\dfrac{-12}{4} = 3$... but wait, Vieta's counts the repeated root twice, giving sum $= 3$. For a single-answer SPR question, give the single solution $\dfrac{3}{2}$, but if asked for the "sum of all solutions" of a repeated root, it's still $\dfrac{3}{2}$ (one solution counted once).

 

What to Do on Test Day

  • Sum of solutions shortcut: For $ax^2 + bx + c = 0$, the sum is $-\dfrac{b}{a}$. No need to find each root.
  • Absolute value: Isolate $|E|$ first, then split into two cases. If $|E| = k$ with $k < 0$, there's no solution.
  • Rational equations: Multiply by the denominator, solve, then check that no solution makes the denominator zero.
  • "Positive solution" vs. "sum": Read carefully. These are different questions. One asks for a single root; the other asks for the total.
  • Don't forget $\pm$. When you take a square root, you get two values. $(x-3)^2 = 49$ gives $x = 10$ and $x = -4$.
  • Rearrange first. Get everything to one side in standard form ($= 0$) before factoring or applying formulas. A common mistake is applying Vieta's to an equation that isn't in standard form.

Learn the pattern. Then lock it in.

The SAT repeats question patterns. Miss them, and you lose points. Recognize them fast, and you gain points. JustLockedIn shows you which patterns are hurting your score and gives you focused practice to fix them.

Practice this pattern → 205 practice questions available

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