You can also treat as a difference of two squares, then you can factor it directly
@DarkLantern1Ай бұрын
You can also divide both sides by (x-1)^4 and treat it as a 4th root of unity question
@BlaqjaqshellaqАй бұрын
In addition, x^4 - (x-1)^4=[x^2+(x-1)^2]*[x^2-(x-1)^2]=[x^2+(x-1)^2]*[x+(x-1)]*[x-(x-1)]. If x^4 - (x-1)^4=0, it follows that (2*x^2-2*x+1)*(2*x-1)*2=0. If 2*x - 1=0, then x=1/2, giving us one of the roots. If 2*x^2 - 2*x +1=0, this quadratic equation gives us the other two roots, (1+i)/2 and (1-i)/2.
@GezrafАй бұрын
there's a method similar to the 2nd method. instead of relying on conjugates, you could divide both sides by (x-1)^4, so that: (x/(x-1))^4 = 1 take the 4th root x/(x-1) = +-1 x/(x-1) = 1 --> x = x-1 --> false x/(x-1) = -1 --> x = 1 - x --> 2x = 1 --> x = 1/2
@williamperez-hernandez3968Ай бұрын
For 2nd Method, instead of taking 4th root, take only square root. Then we get two equations: 1. x^2 = (x-1)^2, and 2. x^2 = - (x-1)^2. Equation 1 simplifies to 2x=1, so x=1/2. Equation 2 simplifies to 2x^2 - 2x +1 = 0, with complex solutions x = (1+ i)/2 and x = (1-i)/2.
@ytlongbeachАй бұрын
Yes, this is exactly what i did, also !!
@wes9627Ай бұрын
Substitute x=y+1/2 into the given equation and see how many terms cancel out. (y+1/2)^4-(y-1/2)^4=2*4[(1/2)y^3+(1/2)^3*y]=0 Factor out 4y: 4y(y^2+1/4)=0, so y=0 or y=±i/2 Thus, x=y+1/2=1/2 or (1±i)/2
@r4_in_spaceАй бұрын
When a function is shifted, that's called a translation.
@phill3986Ай бұрын
👍👏😀☮️✌️✌️☮️😀👏👍
@trojanleo123Ай бұрын
You used variable "u" and forgot to say Happy birthday to U. 🤣🤣🤣