Try the link. It will give you the basics.
Technically,no. A radical equation has a radical (Square root) in it, and has two solutions because the square root can be positive or negative.
You can tell that an equation is a quadradic equation as long a,b,c are within the equation. All you have to do is rearrange the order of the equation by subtracting or adding the sides to standard form. That was my question but I answered myself so I hope this helps y'all out and doesn't confuse y'all.
the index in a radical equation appears above and left of the root symbol and tells you what kind of root the radicand is.
radical equations have sq roots, cube roots etc. Quadratic equations have x2.
Try the link. It will give you the basics.
Technically,no. A radical equation has a radical (Square root) in it, and has two solutions because the square root can be positive or negative.
You can tell that an equation is a quadradic equation as long a,b,c are within the equation. All you have to do is rearrange the order of the equation by subtracting or adding the sides to standard form. That was my question but I answered myself so I hope this helps y'all out and doesn't confuse y'all.
Radical...Apex :)
the index in a radical equation appears above and left of the root symbol and tells you what kind of root the radicand is.
Square both sides of the equation to get rid of the radical sign. Then just solve as you normally would. Good luck! :-)
A radical equation is an equation that contains a variable inside a radical, such as a square root or a cube root. Solving radical equations involves isolating the radical term and then squaring both sides of the equation to eliminate the radical. It is important to check for extraneous solutions when solving radical equations.
radical equations have sq roots, cube roots etc. Quadratic equations have x2.
It often helps to isolate the radical, and then square both sides. Beware of extraneous solutions - the new equation may have solutions that are not part of the solutions of the original equation, so you definitely need to check any purported solutions with the original equation.
When in doubt always square both sides of the equation.
The first step is produce the radical equation that needs solving.
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