EQUATIONS INVOLVING FRACTIONS


Note:




If you would like an in-depth review of fractions, click on Fractions.


Solve for x in the following equation.

Problem 5.2d: tex2html_wrap_inline155 tex2html_wrap_inline248



Answer: tex2html_wrap_inline155 tex2html_wrap_inline250 are the exact answers and tex2html_wrap_inline252 are the approximate answer.



Comment on answers: You may wonder why we give you the answers in two forms: exact and approximate. There is a reason. Students seem perplexed when they think they have worked a problem correctly and yet, their exact answers differ from the exact answers in the book. The student is not necessarily wrong. Depending on the method chosen to work the problem, exact answers have a different look. How do you know whether your exact answer is equivalent to a different looking exact answer in the book? Simplify both. If both exact answers are correct, they will both simplify to the same approximate answer.


Next time your answer differs from the answer in the book, simplify both. If the approximate answers are the same, you are correct. If not, go back to the drawing board and try to find your mistake.


Solution:

Rewrite the problem so that every denominator is factored


eqnarray52

Recall that you cannot divide by zero. Therefore, the first fraction is valid if , tex2html_wrap_inline254 the second fraction is valid if tex2html_wrap_inline256 and the third fraction is valid is tex2html_wrap_inline258 . If either tex2html_wrap_inline260 or tex2html_wrap_inline262 turn out to be the solutions, you must discard them as extraneous solutions.


Multiply both sides by the least common multiple tex2html_wrap_inline264 (the smallest number that all the denominators will divide into evenly). This step will eliminate all the denominators.


eqnarray67


eqnarray76


eqnarray85


eqnarray92


which is equivalent to


eqnarray97


eqnarray107


which can be rewritten as


eqnarray114


which can be rewritten as


eqnarray123


which can be simplified to


eqnarray138


eqnarray146



The answers are tex2html_wrap_inline266 However, this may or may not be the answer. You must check the solution with the original equation.


Check the solution tex2html_wrap_inline270 by substituting 5.9160797831 in the original equation for x. If the left side of the equation equals the right side of the equation after the substitution, you have found the correct answer.



Since the left side of the original equation is reasonably close to the right side of the original equation after we substitute the value 5.9160797831 for x, then x=5.9160797831 is a solution.


Check the solution tex2html_wrap_inline282 by substituting -5.9160797831 in the original equation for x. If the left side of the equation equals the right side of the equation after the substitution, you have found the correct answer.



Since the left side of the original equation is reasonably close to the right side of the original equation after we substitute the value -5.9160797831 for x, then x=-5.9160797831 is a solution.


You can also check your answer by graphing tex2html_wrap_inline294 (formed by subtracting the right side of the original equation from the left side). Look to see where the graph crosses the x-axis; that will be the real solution. Note that the graph crosses the x-axis at two places: tex2html_wrap_inline296 .


We have verified the solution two ways.




If you would like to to review the solution to problem 5.2e, click on problem.

If you would like to return to the beginning of this section, click on again.

If you would like to go back to the equation table of contents, click on this example, click on contents



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