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Of the inequalities $\sqrt{a} \lessgtr b$ ,
- both are undefined when $a < 0$ ;
- both can be sidewise squared when $a \geqq 0$ and $b \geqq 0$ ;
- $\sqrt{a} > b$ is identically true if $a \geqq 0$ and $b < 0$ .
- $\sqrt{a} < b$ is identically untrue if $b < 0$ ;
The above theorem may be utilised for solving inequalities involving square roots.
Example. Solve the inequality
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(1) |
The reality condition $2x+3 \geqq 0$ requires that $x \geqq -1\frac{1}{2}$ . For using the theorem, we distinguish two cases according to the sign of the right hand side:
$1^{\underline{o}}$ : $-1\frac{1}{2} \leqq x < 0$ . The inequality is identically true; we have for (1) the partial solution $-1\frac{1}{2} \leqq x < 0$ .
$2^{\underline{o}}$ : $x \geqq 0$ . Now we can square both sides, obtaining $$2x+3 > x^2$$ $$x^2-2x-3 < 0$$ The zeros of $x^2\!-\!2x\!-\!3$ are $x = 1\pm2$ , i.e. $-1$ and $3$ . Since the graph of the polynomial function is a parabola opening upwards, the polynomial attains its
negative values when $-1 < x < 3$ (see quadratic inequality). Thus we obtain for (1) the partial solution $0 \leqq x < 3$ .
Combining both partial solutions we obtain the total solution $$-1\frac{1}{2} \leqq x < 3.$$
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