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CanadaON
Grade 11

Solve radical equations

Lesson

Radical terms are terms that have a root sign, such as a square root or cube root. Some equations contain radical terms and, in this lesson, we are going to look at how to solve these kinds of equations.

The process is basically the same as solving "regular" linear equations. We can still use backtracking (that is, using the opposite operation) to solve equations. So how do we backtrack radical terms? We use exponents or powers.

Proof:

The fractional exponent law states: $x^{\frac{1}{m}}=\sqrt[m]{x}$x1m=mx

The power of a power law states: $\left(x^m\right)^n=x^{mn}$(xm)n=xmn

So: 

$\left(\sqrt[m]{x}\right)^m$(mx)m $=$= $\left(x^{\frac{1}{m}}\right)^m$(x1m)m
  $=$= $x^{\frac{m}{m}}$xmm
  $=$= $x^1$x1
  $=$= $x$x

 

Worked Examples

QUESTION 1

Solve $\sqrt{x}=\sqrt{13}$x=13.

QUESTION 2

$\sqrt{m}+2=0$m+2=0

  1. Solve for $m$m.

  2. Find the value of $\sqrt{m}+2$m+2 when $m=4$m=4.

  3. Is $m=4$m=4 a solution of $\sqrt{m}+2=0$m+2=0?

    Yes

    A

    No

    B

QUESTION 3

Solve $\sqrt{-5x+2}=\sqrt{-2x+8}$5x+2=2x+8.

 

 

Outcomes

11U.A.2.5

Solve problems involving the intersection of a linear function and a quadratic function graphically and algebraically

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