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27 votes
27 votes
Solve for x.


\rm \longrightarrow \frac{x}{ \sqrt{ {x}^(2) + 1} } = {x}^(4) - x
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User Gunstick
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2 Answers

16 votes
16 votes

Factorize both sides of the equation:


\frac x{√(x^2+1)} = x^4 - x


\frac x{√(x^2+1)} = x(x^3-1)


\frac x{√(x^2+1)} - x(x^3-1) = 0


x \left(\frac1{√(x^2+1)} - (x^3 - 1)\right) = 0

One immediate solution is then x = 0. This leaves us with


\frac1{√(x^2+1)} - (x^3 - 1) = 0

or as we had earlier,


\frac1{√(x^2+1)} = x^3 - 1

Take the square of both sides:


\frac1{x^2+1} = \left(x^3-1\right)^2


\frac1{x^2+1} = x^6 - 2x^3 + 1

Turn this into a polynomial equation:


1 = \left(x^2+1\right) \left(x^6-2x^3+1\right)

Expand the right side and make it equal to zero:


1 = x^8 + x^6 - 2x^5 - 2x^3 + x^2 + 1


0 = x^8 + x^6 - 2x^5 - 2x^3 + x^2

Each term in the polynomial has a common factor of x². Factoring this out just gives x = 0 again as a solution.


0 = x^2 \left(x^6 + x^4 - 2x^3 - 2x + 1\right)


0 = x^6 + x^4 - 2x^3 - 2x + 1

You'll need a computer to solve the remain se.xtic equation. Solving over reals, you would find two solutions, x ≈ 0.438 and x ≈ 1.18, but only x ≈ 1.18 is valid.

User Kasztelan
by
3.1k points
11 votes
11 votes

Answer:

  • x = 0 and x = 1.181

Explanation:

Another solution is graphical.

Take either side as a function and find the intersection of the graphs.

Use graphing software to make it much easier.

See below

Solve for x. \rm \longrightarrow \frac{x}{ \sqrt{ {x}^(2) + 1} } = {x}^(4) - x Best-example-1
User Deppfx
by
2.9k points