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Conjugate and radical equation (Posted on 2023-04-11) Difficulty: 3 of 5
For b denoting sqrt(2) find all possible values of x, satisfying :

(b+1)^x +(b-1)^x=34

No Solution Yet Submitted by Ady TZIDON    
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Solution Solution | Comment 2 of 3 |
So we have (sqrt[2]+1)^x + (sqrt[2]-1)^x = 34

sqrt[2]+1 and sqrt[2]-1 are a reciprocal pair.  Then multiply the equation through by (sqrt[2]+1)^x and move everything to one side
[(sqrt[2]+1)^x]^2 - 34*[(sqrt[2]+1)^x] + 1 = 0

Then treating this as quadratic in (sqrt[2]+1)^x we can solve and get
(sqrt[2]+1)^x = 17 +/- 12*sqrt(2)

Some algebraic arithmetic: (sqrt[2]+1)^4 = (sqrt[2]-1)^-4 = 17 + 12*sqrt(2) and (sqrt[2]-1)^4 = (sqrt[2]+1)^-4 = 17 - 12*sqrt(2).

Then (sqrt[2]+1)^x = 17 + 12*sqrt(2) = (sqrt[2]+1)^4 
or (sqrt[2]+1)^x = 17 - 12*sqrt(2) = (sqrt[2]+1)^-4

Finally it is clear from these last two expressions that x=4 or x=-4
The values of x being negatives of each other correlates to the fact that sqrt[2]+1 and sqrt[2]-1 are a reciprocal pair and are being raised to the xth power.

  Posted by Brian Smith on 2023-04-11 12:20:03
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