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5 August, 23:48

Sienna is solving a quadratic equation. She wants to find the value of x by taking the square root of both sides of the equation. Which equation allows her to do this?

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  1. 6 August, 00:56
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    Step-by-step explanation:

    For Sienna to be able to take the square root of both sides while solving a quadratic equation, she must have an expression with square on at least, the side that contains the variable she is trying to determine. Equation of the form:

    (x + a) ² = b

    'a' and 'b' could be any number, - 1, 0, 1/3, - 5/6, anything really.

    So, she can take square roots of both sides then, like this

    √ (x + a) ² = √b

    x + a = ±√b

    x = - a ± √b

    Square roots always cancel out squares, and the '±' is because a square is satisfies by both + and -, 3² = 9, and (-3) ² = 9.

    It is the nature of the problem being solved that determines if we take just one or both of these answers.
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