asked 226k views
5 votes
Ln(x+3) greater than equal to zero

asked
User Gacek
by
8.7k points

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

x ≥ -3

Explanation:

I must assume that you wish to "solve ln(x+3) greater than equal to zero."

Symbolically, you have

ln(x + 3) ≥ 0. Note that the domain of ln x is (0, infinity); in other words, x must be greater than zero. If we have ln(x + 3) we must work with the restriction

x + 3 ≥ 0. We must solve this for x:

Subtracting 3 from both sides, we get:

x ≥ -3

This is both the "domain" of the given function and the "solution."

answered
User Lewisqic
by
8.6k points
4 votes

Answer:

Greater than

Explanation:

X is being added with three, compared to zero it would be higher. X is unknown, but an example would be x=5. Then it would be 5+3 is more than zero.

answered
User Yun Luo
by
8.1k points

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