University Calculus: Early Transcendentals (3rd Edition)

Published by Pearson
ISBN 10: 0321999584
ISBN 13: 978-0-32199-958-0

Chapter Appendices - Section A.1 - Real Numbers and the Real Line - Exercises - Page AP-6: 18

Answer

$x\in(-\sqrt{2},\sqrt{2})$

Work Step by Step

The square root function is defined for nonnegative real numbers, and is an increasing function. This means that if a and b are nonnegative, $a \lt b\Rightarrow\sqrt{a} \lt \sqrt{b}$ An alternate definition of the absolute value is $|x|=\sqrt{x^{2}}$. Both sides of the inequality sign are nonnegative, so we may take the square root of both sides, with the direction of inequality being unchanged: $\sqrt{x^{2}} \lt \sqrt{2}$ $|x| \lt \sqrt{2}$ By property 6, from the table 'Absolute Values and Intervals", $-\sqrt{2} \lt x \lt \sqrt{2}$ In interval form, we can write this result as $x\in(-\sqrt{2},\sqrt{2})$
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