by Analistul Thu Aug 09, 2007 12:57 pm
For the following problem I believe that x=2, x=3 and x=5 should also be considered in the intervals or separately.
[b]"Which of the following sets includes ALL of the solutions of x that will satisfy the equation: ?
|x-2|-|x-3|=|x-5|
Answer
One way to solve equations with absolute values is to solve for x over a series of intervals. In each interval of x, the sign of the expressions within each pair of absolute value indicators does not change.
In the equation , there are 4 intervals of interest:
x < 2: In this interval, the value inside each of the three absolute value expressions is negative.
2 < x < 3: In this interval, the value inside the first absolute value expression is positive, while the value inside the other two absolute value expressions is negative.
3 < x < 5: In this interval, the value inside the first two absolute value expressions is positive, while the value inside the last absolute value expression is negative.
5 < x: In this interval, the value inside each of the three absolute value expressions is positive.
Use each interval for x to rewrite the equation so that it can be evaluated without absolute value signs.
For the first interval, x < 2, we can solve the equation by rewriting each of the expressions inside the absolute value signs as negative (and thereby remove the absolute value signs):
Notice that the solution x = 6 is NOT a valid solution since it lies outside the interval x < 2. (Remember, we are solving the equation for x SUCH THAT x is within the interval of interest).
For the second interval 2 < x < 3, we can solve the equation by rewriting the expression inside the first absolute value sign as positive and by rewriting the expressions inside the other absolute values signs as negative:
Notice, again, that the solution is NOT a valid solution since it lies outside the interval 2 < x < 3.
For the third interval 3 < x < 5, we can solve the equation by rewriting the expressions inside the first two absolute value signs as positive and by rewriting the expression inside the last absolute value sign as negative:
The solution x = 4 is a valid solution since it lies within the interval 3 < x < 5.
Finally, for the fourth interval 5 < x, we can solve the equation by rewriting each of the expressions inside the absolute value signs as positive:
The solution x = 6 is a valid solution since it lies within the interval 5 < x.
We conclude that the only two solutions of the original equation are x = 4 and x = 6. Only answer choice C contains all of the solutions, both 4 and 6, as part of its set. Therefore, C is the correct answer."[/b][/b]