How do you solve sqrt(3x+10)=sqrt(x+11)-1?

1 Answer
Mar 20, 2017

x=-2

Explanation:

Square both sides:

sqrt(3x+10)^2=(sqrt(x+11)-1)^2

The square of a square root is simply what's on the inside. So the left side is simply:

3x+10

However, the right side, you have to distribute. Use FOIL:

(sqrt(x+11))^2-sqrt(x+11)-sqrt(x+11)+1

Again, the square root cancels with the squared:

x+11 -sqrt(x+11)-sqrt(x+11)+1

Combine like terms:

x+12 - 2sqrt(x+11)

Now write both sides together:

3x+10=x+12 - 2sqrt(x+11)

Isolate the square root by subtracting x+12 and then dividing by -2:

(2x-2)/-2=sqrt(x+11)

Let's simplify the left side:

(2x-2)/-2=-x+1

Now we have another square root so we have to square both sides again:

(-x+1)^2=(sqrt(x+11))^2

The square root cancels with the square:

(-x+1)^2=x+11

Distribute on the left side:

x^2-x-x+1=x+11

Simplify the left side:

x^2-2x+1=x+11

Move everything to the left by subtracing x+11

x^2-3x-10=0

Factor:

(x-5)(x+2)=0

Set x-5 and x+2 equal to 0 and solve for x:

x=5,-2

Plug back in to check:

sqrt (25)=sqrt(16)-1

This doesn't work so 5 is an extraneous variable. Now the other one:

sqrt(4)=sqrt(9)-1

That works! So we only have

x=-2