4. Solving Absolute Value Equations
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Break down the given absolute value equation two separate equations.
b=3 and b=5
When solving an equation involving absolute value expressions, we should consider what would happen if we removed the absolute value symbols. Let's look at an example equation. |ax+b|=|cx+d| Although we can make 4 statements about this equation, there are actually only two possible cases to consider.
| Statement | Result |
|---|---|
| Both absolute values are positive. | ax+b=cx+d |
| Both absolute values are negative. | -(ax+b)=-(cx+d) |
| Only the left-hand side is negative. | -(ax+b)=cx+d |
| Only the right-hand side is negative. | ax+b=-(cx+d) |
lc 2b-9 ≥ 0:2b-9 = (b-6) & (I) 2b-9 < 0:2b-9 = - (b-6) & (II)
(II): Distribute -1
(I), (II):LHS+9=RHS+9
(I):LHS-b=RHS-b
(II):LHS+b=RHS+b
(II):.LHS /3.=.RHS /3.
b= 3
Multiply
Subtract terms
|-3|=3
b= 5
Multiply
Subtract terms
|1|=1
|-1|=1