College algebra

kycats2003 said:
How do I solve this problem:

sqrt x+4 - sqrt x-4 = 2
Domain Issues are FIRST

x >= -4 - Why is that?

Isolate one of the radicals

sqrt x+4 = 2 + sqrt(x-4)

Square things

x+4 = (2 + sqrt(x-4))<sup>2</sup>

Expand and Simplify. This will leave you still with a radical expression. Isolate it and square things again. It is a bit tedious, so pay attention.
 
x >= -4 - Why is that?

Shouldn't that be x >= 4, TK? You need a 2nd coffee :)

Btw KentuckyCat, looking at this equation of yours:
sqrt(x+4) - sqrt(x-4) = 2
means the difference between the 2 squares is 8 :
x+4 is 8 greater than x-4, right?
so you can only have 9 and 1 (assuming integer solution):
sqrt(9) - sqrt(1) = 2 : 3 - 1 = 2 ; ok?
so x = 5 : capish
 
Yup. I was backwards. Thanks for the heads-up.
 
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