Solving Math Problem: sqrt (a^2 - a [delta] d) = a - sqrt(a [delta] d)?

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The discussion centers on the mathematical expression sqrt(a^2 - a [delta] d) and its simplification. The user incorrectly equates sqrt(a^2 - a [delta] d) to a - sqrt(a [delta] d), which is proven incorrect through algebraic manipulation. The correct evaluation shows that for a = 5 and delta d = 9/5, sqrt(a^2 - a [delta] d) equals 4, while a - sqrt(a [delta] d) equals 2, confirming the initial equation is false. Additionally, the discussion includes a reference to using LaTeX for mathematical expressions.

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Suppose I have sqrt (a^2 - a [delta] d). What do I do? Do I do like this: sqrt (a^2 - a [delta] d) = a - sqrt(a [delta] d)? Thanks.

PS: One more thing. How to write mathematics with latex?
 
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What is sqrt (a^2 - a [delta] d) equal to? or are you asking to simplify it?
 
Yeah. I was just wondering whether it can still be simplified.
 
Depending on what you want to do, a differential approximation, or maybe a Taylor sum, might be useful.

But as for algebraic manipulation, what you did is wrong. roots and exponents (usually) distribute over multiplication (and division), not addition (and subtraction).
 
Hurkyl said:
But as for algebraic manipulation, what you did is wrong. roots and exponents (usually) distribute over multiplication (and division), not addition (and subtraction).

Could you give an example to demonstrate that? And how can I correct my wrong algebraic manipulation? Thanks.
 
Say a = 5, and delta d = 9 / 5.
So:
\sqrt{a ^ 2 - a \Delta d} = \sqrt{5 ^ 2 - 5 \times \frac{9}{5}} = \sqrt{25 - 9} = \sqrt{16} = 4
And:
a - \sqrt{a \Delta d} = 5 - \sqrt{5 \times \frac{9}{5}} = 5 - \sqrt{9} = 5 - 3 = 2
And 4 is not 2.
Viet Dao,
 
Thanks, VietDao29.
 

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