Finding the solution set for a quadratic inequality $x^2-2<frac{7}{2}x$












3












$begingroup$



If $x^2-2<frac{7}{2}x$ then what is the solution set for $x$?




I have most of the problem done, I just don't know how to lay out my answer. The answer is supposed to be $$boxed{-frac12<x<4}$$



First, I rewrote the problem saying $x^2-frac{7}{2}x-2<0$, and to be able to conveniently factor it I decided to multiply both sides by 2:



$$2x^2-7x-4<0$$



$$(2x+1)(x-4)<0$$



$$x<-frac12, x<4, text{or} (-infty, -frac12) cup (-infty, 4)$$



I know that doesn't make sense because that's the solution set for the equation less than $0$, when really we want to find the solution set for it less than $frac72x$. So how do I get the above solution? Would it suffice to just draw a number line and say if all values less than $-frac12$ and all values greater than $4$ turn the equation to $<0$ then it must be values between $-frac12 text{and} 4$?










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  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    14 hours ago
















3












$begingroup$



If $x^2-2<frac{7}{2}x$ then what is the solution set for $x$?




I have most of the problem done, I just don't know how to lay out my answer. The answer is supposed to be $$boxed{-frac12<x<4}$$



First, I rewrote the problem saying $x^2-frac{7}{2}x-2<0$, and to be able to conveniently factor it I decided to multiply both sides by 2:



$$2x^2-7x-4<0$$



$$(2x+1)(x-4)<0$$



$$x<-frac12, x<4, text{or} (-infty, -frac12) cup (-infty, 4)$$



I know that doesn't make sense because that's the solution set for the equation less than $0$, when really we want to find the solution set for it less than $frac72x$. So how do I get the above solution? Would it suffice to just draw a number line and say if all values less than $-frac12$ and all values greater than $4$ turn the equation to $<0$ then it must be values between $-frac12 text{and} 4$?










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    14 hours ago














3












3








3





$begingroup$



If $x^2-2<frac{7}{2}x$ then what is the solution set for $x$?




I have most of the problem done, I just don't know how to lay out my answer. The answer is supposed to be $$boxed{-frac12<x<4}$$



First, I rewrote the problem saying $x^2-frac{7}{2}x-2<0$, and to be able to conveniently factor it I decided to multiply both sides by 2:



$$2x^2-7x-4<0$$



$$(2x+1)(x-4)<0$$



$$x<-frac12, x<4, text{or} (-infty, -frac12) cup (-infty, 4)$$



I know that doesn't make sense because that's the solution set for the equation less than $0$, when really we want to find the solution set for it less than $frac72x$. So how do I get the above solution? Would it suffice to just draw a number line and say if all values less than $-frac12$ and all values greater than $4$ turn the equation to $<0$ then it must be values between $-frac12 text{and} 4$?










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$





If $x^2-2<frac{7}{2}x$ then what is the solution set for $x$?




I have most of the problem done, I just don't know how to lay out my answer. The answer is supposed to be $$boxed{-frac12<x<4}$$



First, I rewrote the problem saying $x^2-frac{7}{2}x-2<0$, and to be able to conveniently factor it I decided to multiply both sides by 2:



$$2x^2-7x-4<0$$



$$(2x+1)(x-4)<0$$



$$x<-frac12, x<4, text{or} (-infty, -frac12) cup (-infty, 4)$$



I know that doesn't make sense because that's the solution set for the equation less than $0$, when really we want to find the solution set for it less than $frac72x$. So how do I get the above solution? Would it suffice to just draw a number line and say if all values less than $-frac12$ and all values greater than $4$ turn the equation to $<0$ then it must be values between $-frac12 text{and} 4$?







algebra-precalculus inequality quadratics






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edited 11 hours ago









YuiTo Cheng

2,3694937




2,3694937










asked 14 hours ago









Lex_iLex_i

1177




1177








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    14 hours ago














  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    14 hours ago








1




1




$begingroup$
You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
$endgroup$
– Jack
14 hours ago




$begingroup$
You have almost solved it - draw a picture of $y = (2x+1)(x-4)$ and conclude that this graph is less than $0$ on the set $(-1/2, 4)$
$endgroup$
– Jack
14 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















3












$begingroup$

You are on the right track. From $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$, you know that equality occurs when $x=-1/2$ and when $x=4$. To be safe, check the intervals begin{align}x<-1/2:quad &2x+1<0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0\-1/2<x<4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)<0\x>4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4>0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0end{align} Therefore the only solution to the inequality is $-1/2<x<4$.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$





















    2












    $begingroup$

    For $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$ to be true, you want one of the numbers $(2x+1), (x-4)$ to be negative, and the other to be positive.



    Option 1: the first is negative:



    $2x+1<0, x-4>0$ translates to $x<-frac12$ and $x>4$ which is, of course, impossible.



    Option 2: The first is positive:
    $2x+1>0, x-4<0$ translates to $x>-frac12$ and $x<4$ which means $xin(-frac12, 4)$.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$





















      0












      $begingroup$

      The inequality is $(x-frac 7 4)^{2}<2+frac {49} {16}$. This means $-r <x-frac 7 4 <r$ where $r=sqrt {2+frac {49} {16}}=frac 9 4$. Can you continue?






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$





















        0












        $begingroup$

        The key realization is that $ab<0$ if and only if one of them is positive, and one of them is negative.



        So we know that



        $$2x+1 <0 implies x < - frac 1 2 ;;;;; text{and} ;;;;; x-4<0 implies x<4$$



        But notice that, for some values of $x$, you might have some of these positive, or at other times negative. So we have to consider three potential solution sets:





        • $x$ is between $-1/2,4$


        • $x$ is less than $-1/2$


        • $x$ is greater than $4$


        If $x<-1/2$, then $2x+1<0$, but $x-4<0$ too, so their product is positive.



        Similarly, if $x>4$, then both factors and thus their product is positive.



        Thus, neither solution set can satisfy the inequalities simultaneously (and thus cannot solve the original inequality). The only conclusion left is that $-1/2 < x < 4$.



        Indeed, since $x>-1/2$, we have $2x+1>0$, but since $x<4$ we have $x-4<0$. This means their product is negative, which is precisely what we want!





        A more intuitive method might be to consider that, as noted, the original inequality is



        $$x^2 - frac 7 2 x - 2 < 0$$



        When is a quadratic negative? As it happens, you can easily see, if the leading coefficient is positive, then the quadratic is negative between its two roots! (For negative leading coefficient, it is negative outside of its roots instead.)



        Yet another method might be to consider the three cases for this inequality: either $x$ is to the left of the leftmost root, in between the two, or to the right of the rightmost root. Plug in some $x$ on each interval - say, $x=-1, x=0, x=5$, respectively - and see which give you cases less than zero, and those that don't. Owing to how the quadratic behaves, the corresponding "test values" that satisfy the inequality are on the interval that is the solution (left of the left root, in-between, or right of the right root), and thus your answer would be those intervals. (Granted this isn't much different than the method noted in the previous paragraph, but if you find this easier to process more power to you man.)



        And of course, a graph always helps if it's available. Though a graph doesn't constitute a full-blown proof, it can always be helpful for getting an intuition of the situation. Indeed for the inequality above, we have the graph below, which makes the solution set immediately clear:



        enter image description here






        share|cite|improve this answer











        $endgroup$














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          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

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          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

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          3












          $begingroup$

          You are on the right track. From $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$, you know that equality occurs when $x=-1/2$ and when $x=4$. To be safe, check the intervals begin{align}x<-1/2:quad &2x+1<0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0\-1/2<x<4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)<0\x>4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4>0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0end{align} Therefore the only solution to the inequality is $-1/2<x<4$.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$


















            3












            $begingroup$

            You are on the right track. From $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$, you know that equality occurs when $x=-1/2$ and when $x=4$. To be safe, check the intervals begin{align}x<-1/2:quad &2x+1<0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0\-1/2<x<4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)<0\x>4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4>0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0end{align} Therefore the only solution to the inequality is $-1/2<x<4$.






            share|cite|improve this answer









            $endgroup$
















              3












              3








              3





              $begingroup$

              You are on the right track. From $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$, you know that equality occurs when $x=-1/2$ and when $x=4$. To be safe, check the intervals begin{align}x<-1/2:quad &2x+1<0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0\-1/2<x<4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)<0\x>4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4>0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0end{align} Therefore the only solution to the inequality is $-1/2<x<4$.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$



              You are on the right track. From $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$, you know that equality occurs when $x=-1/2$ and when $x=4$. To be safe, check the intervals begin{align}x<-1/2:quad &2x+1<0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0\-1/2<x<4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4<0implies(2x+1)(x-4)<0\x>4:quad&2x+1>0,quad x-4>0implies(2x+1)(x-4)>0end{align} Therefore the only solution to the inequality is $-1/2<x<4$.







              share|cite|improve this answer












              share|cite|improve this answer



              share|cite|improve this answer










              answered 14 hours ago









              TheSimpliFireTheSimpliFire

              13.1k62464




              13.1k62464























                  2












                  $begingroup$

                  For $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$ to be true, you want one of the numbers $(2x+1), (x-4)$ to be negative, and the other to be positive.



                  Option 1: the first is negative:



                  $2x+1<0, x-4>0$ translates to $x<-frac12$ and $x>4$ which is, of course, impossible.



                  Option 2: The first is positive:
                  $2x+1>0, x-4<0$ translates to $x>-frac12$ and $x<4$ which means $xin(-frac12, 4)$.






                  share|cite|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$


















                    2












                    $begingroup$

                    For $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$ to be true, you want one of the numbers $(2x+1), (x-4)$ to be negative, and the other to be positive.



                    Option 1: the first is negative:



                    $2x+1<0, x-4>0$ translates to $x<-frac12$ and $x>4$ which is, of course, impossible.



                    Option 2: The first is positive:
                    $2x+1>0, x-4<0$ translates to $x>-frac12$ and $x<4$ which means $xin(-frac12, 4)$.






                    share|cite|improve this answer









                    $endgroup$
















                      2












                      2








                      2





                      $begingroup$

                      For $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$ to be true, you want one of the numbers $(2x+1), (x-4)$ to be negative, and the other to be positive.



                      Option 1: the first is negative:



                      $2x+1<0, x-4>0$ translates to $x<-frac12$ and $x>4$ which is, of course, impossible.



                      Option 2: The first is positive:
                      $2x+1>0, x-4<0$ translates to $x>-frac12$ and $x<4$ which means $xin(-frac12, 4)$.






                      share|cite|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$



                      For $(2x+1)(x-4)<0$ to be true, you want one of the numbers $(2x+1), (x-4)$ to be negative, and the other to be positive.



                      Option 1: the first is negative:



                      $2x+1<0, x-4>0$ translates to $x<-frac12$ and $x>4$ which is, of course, impossible.



                      Option 2: The first is positive:
                      $2x+1>0, x-4<0$ translates to $x>-frac12$ and $x<4$ which means $xin(-frac12, 4)$.







                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer










                      answered 14 hours ago









                      5xum5xum

                      92.6k394162




                      92.6k394162























                          0












                          $begingroup$

                          The inequality is $(x-frac 7 4)^{2}<2+frac {49} {16}$. This means $-r <x-frac 7 4 <r$ where $r=sqrt {2+frac {49} {16}}=frac 9 4$. Can you continue?






                          share|cite|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$


















                            0












                            $begingroup$

                            The inequality is $(x-frac 7 4)^{2}<2+frac {49} {16}$. This means $-r <x-frac 7 4 <r$ where $r=sqrt {2+frac {49} {16}}=frac 9 4$. Can you continue?






                            share|cite|improve this answer









                            $endgroup$
















                              0












                              0








                              0





                              $begingroup$

                              The inequality is $(x-frac 7 4)^{2}<2+frac {49} {16}$. This means $-r <x-frac 7 4 <r$ where $r=sqrt {2+frac {49} {16}}=frac 9 4$. Can you continue?






                              share|cite|improve this answer









                              $endgroup$



                              The inequality is $(x-frac 7 4)^{2}<2+frac {49} {16}$. This means $-r <x-frac 7 4 <r$ where $r=sqrt {2+frac {49} {16}}=frac 9 4$. Can you continue?







                              share|cite|improve this answer












                              share|cite|improve this answer



                              share|cite|improve this answer










                              answered 14 hours ago









                              Kavi Rama MurthyKavi Rama Murthy

                              73.8k53170




                              73.8k53170























                                  0












                                  $begingroup$

                                  The key realization is that $ab<0$ if and only if one of them is positive, and one of them is negative.



                                  So we know that



                                  $$2x+1 <0 implies x < - frac 1 2 ;;;;; text{and} ;;;;; x-4<0 implies x<4$$



                                  But notice that, for some values of $x$, you might have some of these positive, or at other times negative. So we have to consider three potential solution sets:





                                  • $x$ is between $-1/2,4$


                                  • $x$ is less than $-1/2$


                                  • $x$ is greater than $4$


                                  If $x<-1/2$, then $2x+1<0$, but $x-4<0$ too, so their product is positive.



                                  Similarly, if $x>4$, then both factors and thus their product is positive.



                                  Thus, neither solution set can satisfy the inequalities simultaneously (and thus cannot solve the original inequality). The only conclusion left is that $-1/2 < x < 4$.



                                  Indeed, since $x>-1/2$, we have $2x+1>0$, but since $x<4$ we have $x-4<0$. This means their product is negative, which is precisely what we want!





                                  A more intuitive method might be to consider that, as noted, the original inequality is



                                  $$x^2 - frac 7 2 x - 2 < 0$$



                                  When is a quadratic negative? As it happens, you can easily see, if the leading coefficient is positive, then the quadratic is negative between its two roots! (For negative leading coefficient, it is negative outside of its roots instead.)



                                  Yet another method might be to consider the three cases for this inequality: either $x$ is to the left of the leftmost root, in between the two, or to the right of the rightmost root. Plug in some $x$ on each interval - say, $x=-1, x=0, x=5$, respectively - and see which give you cases less than zero, and those that don't. Owing to how the quadratic behaves, the corresponding "test values" that satisfy the inequality are on the interval that is the solution (left of the left root, in-between, or right of the right root), and thus your answer would be those intervals. (Granted this isn't much different than the method noted in the previous paragraph, but if you find this easier to process more power to you man.)



                                  And of course, a graph always helps if it's available. Though a graph doesn't constitute a full-blown proof, it can always be helpful for getting an intuition of the situation. Indeed for the inequality above, we have the graph below, which makes the solution set immediately clear:



                                  enter image description here






                                  share|cite|improve this answer











                                  $endgroup$


















                                    0












                                    $begingroup$

                                    The key realization is that $ab<0$ if and only if one of them is positive, and one of them is negative.



                                    So we know that



                                    $$2x+1 <0 implies x < - frac 1 2 ;;;;; text{and} ;;;;; x-4<0 implies x<4$$



                                    But notice that, for some values of $x$, you might have some of these positive, or at other times negative. So we have to consider three potential solution sets:





                                    • $x$ is between $-1/2,4$


                                    • $x$ is less than $-1/2$


                                    • $x$ is greater than $4$


                                    If $x<-1/2$, then $2x+1<0$, but $x-4<0$ too, so their product is positive.



                                    Similarly, if $x>4$, then both factors and thus their product is positive.



                                    Thus, neither solution set can satisfy the inequalities simultaneously (and thus cannot solve the original inequality). The only conclusion left is that $-1/2 < x < 4$.



                                    Indeed, since $x>-1/2$, we have $2x+1>0$, but since $x<4$ we have $x-4<0$. This means their product is negative, which is precisely what we want!





                                    A more intuitive method might be to consider that, as noted, the original inequality is



                                    $$x^2 - frac 7 2 x - 2 < 0$$



                                    When is a quadratic negative? As it happens, you can easily see, if the leading coefficient is positive, then the quadratic is negative between its two roots! (For negative leading coefficient, it is negative outside of its roots instead.)



                                    Yet another method might be to consider the three cases for this inequality: either $x$ is to the left of the leftmost root, in between the two, or to the right of the rightmost root. Plug in some $x$ on each interval - say, $x=-1, x=0, x=5$, respectively - and see which give you cases less than zero, and those that don't. Owing to how the quadratic behaves, the corresponding "test values" that satisfy the inequality are on the interval that is the solution (left of the left root, in-between, or right of the right root), and thus your answer would be those intervals. (Granted this isn't much different than the method noted in the previous paragraph, but if you find this easier to process more power to you man.)



                                    And of course, a graph always helps if it's available. Though a graph doesn't constitute a full-blown proof, it can always be helpful for getting an intuition of the situation. Indeed for the inequality above, we have the graph below, which makes the solution set immediately clear:



                                    enter image description here






                                    share|cite|improve this answer











                                    $endgroup$
















                                      0












                                      0








                                      0





                                      $begingroup$

                                      The key realization is that $ab<0$ if and only if one of them is positive, and one of them is negative.



                                      So we know that



                                      $$2x+1 <0 implies x < - frac 1 2 ;;;;; text{and} ;;;;; x-4<0 implies x<4$$



                                      But notice that, for some values of $x$, you might have some of these positive, or at other times negative. So we have to consider three potential solution sets:





                                      • $x$ is between $-1/2,4$


                                      • $x$ is less than $-1/2$


                                      • $x$ is greater than $4$


                                      If $x<-1/2$, then $2x+1<0$, but $x-4<0$ too, so their product is positive.



                                      Similarly, if $x>4$, then both factors and thus their product is positive.



                                      Thus, neither solution set can satisfy the inequalities simultaneously (and thus cannot solve the original inequality). The only conclusion left is that $-1/2 < x < 4$.



                                      Indeed, since $x>-1/2$, we have $2x+1>0$, but since $x<4$ we have $x-4<0$. This means their product is negative, which is precisely what we want!





                                      A more intuitive method might be to consider that, as noted, the original inequality is



                                      $$x^2 - frac 7 2 x - 2 < 0$$



                                      When is a quadratic negative? As it happens, you can easily see, if the leading coefficient is positive, then the quadratic is negative between its two roots! (For negative leading coefficient, it is negative outside of its roots instead.)



                                      Yet another method might be to consider the three cases for this inequality: either $x$ is to the left of the leftmost root, in between the two, or to the right of the rightmost root. Plug in some $x$ on each interval - say, $x=-1, x=0, x=5$, respectively - and see which give you cases less than zero, and those that don't. Owing to how the quadratic behaves, the corresponding "test values" that satisfy the inequality are on the interval that is the solution (left of the left root, in-between, or right of the right root), and thus your answer would be those intervals. (Granted this isn't much different than the method noted in the previous paragraph, but if you find this easier to process more power to you man.)



                                      And of course, a graph always helps if it's available. Though a graph doesn't constitute a full-blown proof, it can always be helpful for getting an intuition of the situation. Indeed for the inequality above, we have the graph below, which makes the solution set immediately clear:



                                      enter image description here






                                      share|cite|improve this answer











                                      $endgroup$



                                      The key realization is that $ab<0$ if and only if one of them is positive, and one of them is negative.



                                      So we know that



                                      $$2x+1 <0 implies x < - frac 1 2 ;;;;; text{and} ;;;;; x-4<0 implies x<4$$



                                      But notice that, for some values of $x$, you might have some of these positive, or at other times negative. So we have to consider three potential solution sets:





                                      • $x$ is between $-1/2,4$


                                      • $x$ is less than $-1/2$


                                      • $x$ is greater than $4$


                                      If $x<-1/2$, then $2x+1<0$, but $x-4<0$ too, so their product is positive.



                                      Similarly, if $x>4$, then both factors and thus their product is positive.



                                      Thus, neither solution set can satisfy the inequalities simultaneously (and thus cannot solve the original inequality). The only conclusion left is that $-1/2 < x < 4$.



                                      Indeed, since $x>-1/2$, we have $2x+1>0$, but since $x<4$ we have $x-4<0$. This means their product is negative, which is precisely what we want!





                                      A more intuitive method might be to consider that, as noted, the original inequality is



                                      $$x^2 - frac 7 2 x - 2 < 0$$



                                      When is a quadratic negative? As it happens, you can easily see, if the leading coefficient is positive, then the quadratic is negative between its two roots! (For negative leading coefficient, it is negative outside of its roots instead.)



                                      Yet another method might be to consider the three cases for this inequality: either $x$ is to the left of the leftmost root, in between the two, or to the right of the rightmost root. Plug in some $x$ on each interval - say, $x=-1, x=0, x=5$, respectively - and see which give you cases less than zero, and those that don't. Owing to how the quadratic behaves, the corresponding "test values" that satisfy the inequality are on the interval that is the solution (left of the left root, in-between, or right of the right root), and thus your answer would be those intervals. (Granted this isn't much different than the method noted in the previous paragraph, but if you find this easier to process more power to you man.)



                                      And of course, a graph always helps if it's available. Though a graph doesn't constitute a full-blown proof, it can always be helpful for getting an intuition of the situation. Indeed for the inequality above, we have the graph below, which makes the solution set immediately clear:



                                      enter image description here







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                                      edited 14 hours ago

























                                      answered 14 hours ago









                                      Eevee TrainerEevee Trainer

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