Online Course Discussion Forum
MCIII Algebra 5.12
Hello,
I don't understand why I got this one wrong. I got no solutions. What did I do wrong?
Thanks!
Tina Jin
There are two errors. (1) From the second line to the third line, when you cancel the 2 on the left hand side, you should do the same on the right hand side.
(2) $\sqrt{(x-1)^2} = |x-1|$, not simply $x-1$. Depending on whether $x \geq 1$, it is $x-1$ or $1-x$.
Note that this equation has infinitely many solutions, including every value in the interval $\left[\dfrac{1}{2},1\right]$. This was a problem in the very first IMO in 1959.
As long as the equal sign is included in one of the cases, it is fine.
For the question, you get an equation $x + |x-1|=1$, and there are two cases: (1) $x > 1$; (2) $x\leq 1$. In case (1), you get $x=1$, but that is not in the range, so there's no solution. In case (2), you get an identity $1=1$, which means all $x\leq 1$ are solutions. However, the term $\sqrt{2x-1}$ in the equation requires that $x \geq 1/2$, therefore the final solution is $1/2 \leq x \leq 1$.
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