asked 158k views
20 votes
Avery solves the equation below by first squaring both sides of the equation.

Avery solves the equation below by first squaring both sides of the equation.-example-1

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

z = 7/3 is extraneous.

Explanation:

√(z^2+8) = 1 - 2z

z^2 + 8 = (1 - 2z)^2

z^2 + 8 = 1 -4z + 4z^2

3z^2 - 4z - 7 = 0

3z^2 + 3z - 7z - 7 = 0

3z(z + 1) - 7(z + 1) = 0

(3z - 7)(z + 1) = 0

3z = 7, z = -1

z = 7/3, -1.

One of these might be extraneous.

Checking:

√(z^2+8) = 1 - 2z, if z = -1:

√(1 + 8) = 3, -3

1 - 2(-1) = 3. So its not z = -1

if z = 7/3

√((7/3)^2 + 8) = 13.44

1 - 2(7/3) = -3.66

So its z = 7/3

answered
User Rickey
by
8.3k points
12 votes

Answer:


z=(7)/(3)

Explanation:

Given equation:


√(z^2+8)=1-2z

Square both sides:


\implies (√(z^2+8))^2=(1-2z)^2


\implies z^2+8=1-4z+4z^2

Subtract
z^2 from both sides:


\implies 8=1-4z+3z^2

Subtract 8 from both sides:


\implies 0=-7-4z+3z^2


\implies 3z^2-4z-7=0

Rewrite the middle term:


\implies 3z^2+3z-7z-7=0

Factor the first two terms and the last two terms separately:


\implies 3z(z+1)-7(z+1)=0

Factor out the common term
(z+1):


\implies (3z-7)(z+1)=0

Therefore:


\implies (z+1)=0 \implies z=-1


\implies (3z-7)=0 \implies z=(7)/(3)

To find the extraneous solution (the root that is not a root of the original equation), enter the two found values of z into the original equation:


\begin{aligned}z=-1\implies √((-1)^2+8)&=1-2(-1)\\\implies 3&=3\implies \textsf{true}\\\end{aligned}


\begin{aligned}z=(7)/(3) \implies \sqrt{\left((7)/(3)\right)^2+8}&=1-2\left((7)/(3)\right)\\\implies (11)/(3) &=-(11)/(3)\implies \textsf{false}\end{aligned}


\textsf{As}\: (11)/(3) \\eq -(11)/(3)\:\textsf{then}\: z=(7)/(3)\:\textsf{is the extraneous solution}

answered
User Mycargus
by
9.0k points
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