TimbaLanD Posted December 18, 2007 Posted December 18, 2007 Dont tell me the answer but how easy is this to do? X = 3 √(X+3)3 - (X+1)3 + (X+8) 3 find X...
timo Posted December 18, 2007 Posted December 18, 2007 you mean [math]x = 3 \sqrt{(x+3)^3} - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3 [/math]? I'm not even convinced that it can be analytically solved at all.
TimbaLanD Posted December 18, 2007 Author Posted December 18, 2007 I am not sure how to go about this one... you think it can't be solved? [math] x = 3 \sqrt{(x+3)^3 - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3)} [/math]
Country Boy Posted December 18, 2007 Posted December 18, 2007 [math] x = 3 \sqrt{(x+3)^3 - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3)} [/math] Now. that one's easy! Square both side and multiply out the cubes to get a cubic equation- then use the cubic formula. The way Atheist interpreted it (you didn't have enough parentheses to make it clear what the square root applied to), squaring gives a 6th degree polynomial equation- and there is no general formula for the solution of 6th degree equations.
Mr Skeptic Posted December 18, 2007 Posted December 18, 2007 Just to make clarify, should that be a cube root, or 3 times a square root?
ydoaPs Posted December 19, 2007 Posted December 19, 2007 Once you cube both sides and multiply everything out, you can simplify it to a quadratic equation. From there, it's just a matter of the quadratic formula.
timo Posted December 20, 2007 Posted December 20, 2007 Ok, so if I understood correctly, the equation you are trying to solve is [math] x = \left[(x+3)^3 - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3 \right]^{1/3}. [/math] As said, take this to its third power, leading to [math] x^3 = (x+3)^3 - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3. [/math] Multiply that out. As yourdadonapogos said, the x³-terms will cancel, leading to an equation of the type ax²+bx+c=0 which then can be solved using the pq-equation.
TimbaLanD Posted December 20, 2007 Author Posted December 20, 2007 I got [math] x^3 = -x^3+30x^2-168x+538 [/math] Is that right?
insane_alien Posted December 20, 2007 Posted December 20, 2007 you've got a sign wrong somewhere the x^3's should cancel.
thedarkshade Posted December 24, 2007 Posted December 24, 2007 So its: [math] x = 3 \sqrt{(x+3)^3 - (x+1)^3 + (x+8)^3)} [/math] I separated the equation to make it e little easier, so for those three parts I got : 1. [math](x+3)^3=(x+3)^{2}(x+3)=(x^{2}+6x+9)(x+3)[/math] [math]=x^{3}+3x^{2}+6x^{2}+18x+27= x^{3} + 9x^{2} + 18x + 27 [/math] 2. [math](x+1)^3=(x+1)^{2}(x+1)=(x^{2}+2x + 1)(x+1)[/math] [math]=x^{3}+x^{2}+2x^{2}+2x+x+1=x^{3} + 3x^{2} + 3x + 1[/math] 3. [math](x+8)^{3}=(x+8)^{2}(x+8)=(x^{2}+16x+64)(x+8)=[/math] [math]x^{3}+8x^{2}+16x^{2}+128x+64x+512=x^{3} 24x^{2} + 192x + 512[/math] And after we do the operations inside the root we get: [math]x^{3} + 30x^{2} + 207x + 538[/math] So if I'm correct the equation now is: [math]x^{3}=x^{3} + 30x^{2} + 207x +538[/math] As we have the same [math]x^{3}[/math] on both sides, then we eleminate it, and then it looks like this: [math]30x^{2} + 207x +538[/math] And the rest is easy! I hope I haven't made any stupid (forgotten something) mistake!
the tree Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Hmmm, I got [math]0=30\,{x}^{2}+216\,x+538[/math] at the last step. For slightly easier (and more accurate) expansions: [math](a+b)^3 = a^3 +3a^2 b+3ab^2 +b^3[/math], or more generally for any natural power you can use the binomial expansion.
thedarkshade Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Hmmm, I got [math]0=30\,{x}^{2}+216\,x+538[/math] at the last step. Gives imaginary solutions, just like mine!
ydoaPs Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Hmmm, I got [math]0=30\,{x}^{2}+216\,x+538[/math] at the last step. For slightly easier (and more accurate) expansions: [math](a+b)^2 = a^3 +3a^2 b+3ab^2 +b^3[/math], or more generally for any natural power you can use the binomial expansion. I was under the impression (a+b)2=a2+2ab+b2.
the tree Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Bah, a typo, you know what I meant. [math] (a+b)^3 = a^3 +3a^2 b+3ab^2 +b^3 [/math]
insane_alien Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 I was under the impression (a+b)2=a2+2ab+b2. me too. think tree made a whoopsie. EDIT: ninja posted by the tree himself how embarassing.
ydoaPs Posted January 8, 2008 Posted January 8, 2008 Why don't you tell us? Solve for zero then use the quadratic formula.
5614 Posted January 8, 2008 Posted January 8, 2008 At the risk of giving the game away I will ask: are you familiar with complex (imaginary) numbers?
TimbaLanD Posted January 9, 2008 Author Posted January 9, 2008 Do you mean the "i" and "j".. I need to refresh my A/L Maths! Is the answer going to be an imaginarty number? I am lost!
the tree Posted January 9, 2008 Posted January 9, 2008 No, it'll be complex (have both real and imaginary parts).
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