Solve the given simultaneous equation

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Orodruin said:
Since both sets are aleph one, it is possible to construct a bijection between them.
I was thinking about that too. I recalled a problem in an real analysis book of mine which I did not read that long time ago which asked how many algebraic vs. trancendetal numbers (over the rationals) there are. If I remember correctly, there should be countable many (##\aleph_0##) algebraic numbers and uncountable (##\aleph_1##) trancendental numbers... I should revisit my notes at some points
 
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Delta2 said:
Hmm, can we say that the probability a random polynomial to have only real roots is 50%? Hard though to imagine how we define this probability as if we try to define it as a fraction, both the numerator and the denominator are uncountable many...
I guess we'd have to choose a distribution to determine probabilities.
 
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chwala said:
Homework Statement:: Solve for ##x## and ##y## given;
##\sqrt x+ y=7##
##x+\sqrt y=11##
Relevant Equations:: Simultaneous equations
Presuming this is a Diophantine (integer only) equation , we don't have too many choices:

1 + 6
2 + 5
3 + 4

One number has to be a perfect square. Exclude 2 + 5. If x=1, y=6 and that doesn't work either.
 
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