needimprovement Posted August 5, 2010 Posted August 5, 2010 This equation was solved by great mathematician Ramanujan. It's your turn to solve this equation: √X + Y = 7 X + √Y = 11 Solve it.. prove it...
insane_alien Posted August 5, 2010 Posted August 5, 2010 it does not take a great mathemaician to do simulataneous equations.
D H Posted August 5, 2010 Posted August 5, 2010 (edited) Looks to me more like a 4th order polynomial. But only one of the four solutions to that 4th order polynomial works in the sense that the square root symbol means the principal value. Hint: This one sensible solution has integer values of x and y. Edited August 5, 2010 by D H
DJBruce Posted August 5, 2010 Posted August 5, 2010 Here is my answer to the question: A quick inspection of the two equations shows that (9,4) is a solution to that equation. [math]Let: x=9, y=4[/math] [math]\sqrt{9}+4=3+4=7[/math] [math]9+\sqrt{4}=9+2=11[/math] To be honest I didn't really do any algebraic work. I knew that x and y must be positive integer, and more than likely perfect squares. This means y must be less than 7. Since you only have to check the perfect squares y is either 4 or 1. Likewise, x must be less than 11, and since I am assuming x and y are perfect squares you only have to check 9, 4, and 1. Quickly looking at these possible solution sets gives one the answer that x=9, y=4.
Sisyphus Posted August 5, 2010 Posted August 5, 2010 Here is my answer to the question: Indeed. The flaw in the problem is that the answer is too obvious before you formally solve it. Narrowing down to sensible guesses and using trial and error is a shortcut I've often used, but here there is exactly one sensible guess.
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