Lösung 2.3:2a
Aus Online Mathematik Brückenkurs 1
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- | We solve the second order equation by combining together the | + | We solve the second order equation by combining together the ''x''²- and ''x''-terms by completing the square to obtain a quadratic term, and then solve the resulting equation by taking the root. |
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- | -terms by completing the square to obtain a quadratic term, and then solve the resulting equation by taking the root. | + | |
By completing the square, the left-hand side becomes | By completing the square, the left-hand side becomes | ||
- | + | {{Displayed math||<math>\underline{x^{2}-4x\vphantom{()}}+3 = \underline{(x-2)^{2}-2^{2}}+3 = (x-2)^{2}-1\,\textrm{,}</math>}} | |
- | <math>\underline{x^{2}-4x}+3=\underline{ | + | |
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where the underlined part on the right-hand side is the actual completed square. The equation can therefore be written as | where the underlined part on the right-hand side is the actual completed square. The equation can therefore be written as | ||
+ | {{Displayed math||<math>(x-2)^{2}-1 = 0</math>}} | ||
- | + | which we solve by moving the "1" on the right-hand side and taking the square root. This gives the solutions: | |
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- | which we solve by moving the " | + | |
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- | " on the right-hand side and taking the square root. This gives the solutions | + | |
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- | <math>x-2=\sqrt{1}=1</math> | + | :*<math>x-2=\sqrt{1}=1\,,\ </math> i.e. <math>x=2+1=3\,,</math> |
- | i.e. | + | |
- | <math>x=2+1=3 | + | |
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+ | :*<math>x-2=-\sqrt{1}=-1\,,\ </math> i.e. <math>x=2-1=1\,\textrm{.}</math> | ||
- | Because it is easy to make a mistake, we check the answer by substituting | ||
- | <math>x=1</math> | ||
- | and | ||
- | <math>x=3</math> | ||
- | into the original equation.: | ||
+ | Because it is easy to make a mistake, we check the answer by substituting <math>x=1</math> and <math>x=3</math> into the original equation: | ||
- | <math> | + | :*''x'' = 1: <math>\ \text{LHS} = 1^{2}-4\cdot 1+3 = 1-4+3 = 0 = \text{RHS,}</math> |
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- | + | :*''x'' = 3: <math>\ \text{LHS} = 3^{2}-4\cdot 3+3 = 9-12+3 = 0 = \text{RHS.}</math> | |
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Version vom 14:20, 26. Sep. 2008
We solve the second order equation by combining together the x²- and x-terms by completing the square to obtain a quadratic term, and then solve the resulting equation by taking the root.
By completing the square, the left-hand side becomes
where the underlined part on the right-hand side is the actual completed square. The equation can therefore be written as
which we solve by moving the "1" on the right-hand side and taking the square root. This gives the solutions:
- \displaystyle x-2=\sqrt{1}=1\,,\ i.e. \displaystyle x=2+1=3\,,
- \displaystyle x-2=-\sqrt{1}=-1\,,\ i.e. \displaystyle x=2-1=1\,\textrm{.}
Because it is easy to make a mistake, we check the answer by substituting \displaystyle x=1 and \displaystyle x=3 into the original equation:
- x = 1: \displaystyle \ \text{LHS} = 1^{2}-4\cdot 1+3 = 1-4+3 = 0 = \text{RHS,}
- x = 3: \displaystyle \ \text{LHS} = 3^{2}-4\cdot 3+3 = 9-12+3 = 0 = \text{RHS.}