Solve the Equation getting rid of square roots

  • Thread starter Thread starter Plutonium88
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Roots Square
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around solving the equation 1 + √((1+x)√(x^2-24)) = x. Participants identify a mistake in the initial interpretation of the equation due to misplacement of parentheses, which led to confusion in the solution process. After correcting the equation, they confirm that x = 7 is a valid solution, while x = 0 is deemed extraneous. The conversation also touches on the importance of proper mathematical notation for clarity. Ultimately, the correct approach reveals that x = 7 is the only meaningful solution to the problem.
Plutonium88
Messages
173
Reaction score
0
Solve the Equation... getting rid of square roots PLZ

1+ √((1+x)√(x^2-24)) = x
(x*√(x^2-24)) = (x-1)^2 (Square both side)
(-1)+1+(x^√(x^2-24) = (x^2 - 2x +1)-1
x^2(x^2-24) = (x^2 -2x)^2 (Square both sides)
x^4 -24x^2 = (x^2 - 2x)^2
x^4 -24x = x^4 - 4x^3 +4x^2
0 = -4x^3 +4x^2 +4x^2
0 = 4x^2 +4x+ 24

4x^2 -4x -24 = 0


What mistake am I making...

I honestly have tried a bunch of different times, and i had another student check it for me, and i can't catch the mistake I'm making!
 
Physics news on Phys.org


edit:

I misread your equation, I think. Is it
1+\sqrt{(x+1)\sqrt{x^2-24}}=x
 
Last edited:


RoshanBBQ said:
edit:

I misread your equation, I think. Is it
1+\sqrt{(x+1)\sqrt{x^2-24}}=x

It is, he has the extra set of parentheses to imply this.

Edit: Now that I "solved" this (turns out to be a cubic equation) the answer isn't pretty and the equation might be something else that yields an easier answer).

1+ √((1+x)√(x^2-24)) = x
(x*√(x^2-24)) = (x-1)^2 (Square both side)

The right hand side is fine (you subtracted the 1 and then squared) but the left hand side is incorrect.
 
Last edited:


scurty said:
It is, he has the extra set of parentheses to imply this.

Edit: Now that I "solved" this (turns out to be a cubic equation) the answer isn't pretty and the equation might be something else that yields an easier answer).
The right hand side is fine (you subtracted the 1 and then squared) but the left hand side is incorrect.

Honestly i feel like a tool... I just rewrote the question on my board and did it... and this is the way i solved it earlier for my teacher..

unfortunately when i divided 28/4 i got... 6.. not 7.. i couldn't do simple math in my head... x.x

hers my solution i just took a picture off my whiteboard.. c.c

http://postimage.org/image/oku2wqccn/
 
Last edited by a moderator:


I find... when i plug in 7 into the right side

1+all-sqrt(1+x)sqrt(x^2-24) = x

it resolves as 7...

therefore LS = RS Since X=7

Is This CorrecT?
 


Yes, 7 is the correct answer! You miswrote your equation in your first post which is why it confused us. You should have wrote:

1+ sqrt(1+x * sqrt[(x^2)-24]) = x

Or better yet:

\displaystyle 1 + \sqrt{1+x \cdot \sqrt{x^2-24}}=x


You had parentheses aroung the 1 + x originally which implied their sum was being multiplied by the inside square root.
 


scurty said:
Yes, 7 is the correct answer! You miswrote your equation in your first post which is why it confused us. You should have wrote:

1+ sqrt(1+x * sqrt[(x^2)-24]) = x

Or better yet:

\displaystyle 1 + \sqrt{1+x \cdot \sqrt{x^2-24}}=x


You had parentheses aroung the 1 + x originally which implied their sum was being multiplied by the inside square root.

Yea I'm silly like that.. Sorry, but thank you very much for your help, how do i write the equations like you guys are writing so they are much more visually evident.
 


Plutonium88 said:
Yea I'm silly like that.. Sorry, but thank you very much for your help, how do i write the equations like you guys are writing so they are much more visually evident.

You end it with[\tex]. You start it with . Then you use various commands that format into what we wrote. <br /> \sqrt{} is square root<br /> a^b is a power, but you can also do a^{b+c+d}. \frac{numerator}{denominator} is for fractions. I use this:<br /> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_a_formula" target="_blank" class="link link--external" rel="nofollow ugc noopener">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_a_formula</a><br /> <br /> You can also always quote someone who has done it. You will then see how he created his equations in the quoted text. For example, try quoting me or scurty and seeing the statement.
 


√Oh okay thanks a lot. Also I'm coming to find there are 2 solutions for this problem but I can't seen to find the other. I remember in trig there was a way to prove for ex.
Cosx + sinx = 0
Divide by cosx to get tanx

But because u got rid of cosx u could prove it wasn't part of solution anyway in lOst on finding the second solution...

at the point

1+√1+x√x^2-24 = x
√1+x√x^2-24 = x-1 (square both sdie)
1 +x√x^2-24 = (x-1)^2 (subtract 1 from both sides)
x√x^2-24 = x-2x
Divide by x here, and i believe this is where i determine the other solution, but how exactly?

√x^2-24 = X-2
Square both side

x^2-24 = (x-2)^2
x^2-24 = x^2-4x+4
4x = 28
x = 7
so yea this other solution :(
 
Last edited:
  • #10


okay so another teacher helped me today at school with the solution.. My original solution is incorrect.

Variables cannot be divided by, you must factor them, or they can be removed by subtraction/addition.

1 +x√x^2-24 = (x-1)^2

so from this point.

x√x^2-24 = x^2 -2x +1 -1
x√x^2-24 - x^2 +2x = 0

x(√x^2-24 - x + 2)= 0

x = 0 or
√x^2-24 -x + 2 = 0
√x^2-24 = x -2
square both sides
x^2 - 24 = (x-2)^2

x^2 -24 = x^2 -4x +4
4x = 28
x = 7

Plug back in,1+√1+x√X^2-24 = x

X=7 is a solution
x= 0 not a solution due to extraneous roots.
 
Back
Top