How do you solve 2sqrtx +1= 6/sqrtx?

1 Answer
Jul 18, 2015

Reformulate as a quadratic with possible spurious solutions and solve to find x = 9/4 (and spurious solution x=4)

Explanation:

Multiply both sides by sqrt(x) to get:

2x+sqrt(x) = 6

Subtract 2x from both sides to get:

sqrt(x) = 6-2x

Square both sides to get:

x = (6-2x)^2 = 36 - 24x + 4x^2

Note that squaring may introduce spurious solutions, so need to check later.

Subtract x from both sides to get:

4x^2-25x+36 = 0

Use the quadratic formula to find:

x = (25+-sqrt(25^2-(4xx4xx36)))/(2*4)

= (25+-sqrt(625 - 576))/8

= (25+-sqrt(49))/8

= (25+-7)/8

That is x=4 or x=9/4

If x=4 then:

2sqrt(x) + 1 = 2sqrt(4) + 1 = 4 + 1 = 5

But 6/sqrt(x) = 6/sqrt(4) = 6/2 = 3

So x=4 is not a solution of the original equation.

If x = 9/4 then:

2sqrt(x) + 1 = 2sqrt(9/4) + 1 = 2*3/2+1 = 3 + 1 = 4

and 6/sqrt(x) = 6/(sqrt(9/4)) = 6/(3/2) = 12/3 = 4

So the solution of the original equation is x = 9/4