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10.28.2018: One Lesson of Math - Solving Radical Equations

​Today's soundtrack is Dissection: Storm of the Light's Bane/Where Dead Angels Lie, a classic black metal album.


This morning, I'm putting together the past few lessons about radicals - absolute value, simplifying radical expressions, adding and subtracting radical expressions, and multiplying and dividing radical expressions - and now I'm learning how to solve radical linear equations.


Important note: if our solution to a linear equation does not fit within the variable's possible values, it is an extraneous root and no real solution exists.


If we are given a linear equation with a single radical, the steps to solve are as follows:

1) Determine what the variable's value is defined at (x≥0, x≤0, or x∈ℝ)

2) Isolate the radicand

3) Raise both sides of the equation to an exponent equal to the index of the radical

4) Verify the solution to verify that a real root exists within the variable's possible values


To solve a linear equation with two variable radicals, we:

1) Determine what the variable's value is defined at (x≥0, x≤0, or x∈ℝ)

2) Find like terms

3) Balance both sides of the equation while isolating x

4) Verify the solution to verify that a real root exists within the variable's possible values

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