Precalculus: Mathematics for Calculus, 7th Edition

Published by Brooks Cole
ISBN 10: 1305071751
ISBN 13: 978-1-30507-175-9

Chapter 1 - Section 1.5 - Equations - 1.5 Exercises - Page 58: 132

Answer

$x=12cm$

Work Step by Step

We are asked to find $x$ which is the distance of the object from the lens. We know that the focal length ($F$) is $4.8 cm$. And they told us that the distance of the image is 4cm closer to the lens than the object itself, that means $y=x-4$ because a shorter distance means a smaller number. This is the formula: $\frac{1}{F}=\frac{1}{x}+\frac{1}{y}$ Replace with the information we were given: $\frac{1}{4.8}=\frac{1}{x}+\frac{1}{x-4}$ We find the LCD: $4.8x(x-4)$ $\frac{1}{4.8}\times4.8x(x-4)=(\frac{1}{x}+\frac{1}{x-4})\times4.8x(x-4)$ $x(x-4)=\frac{x-4+x}{x(x-4)}\times4.8x(x-4)$ $x^{2}-4x=(2x-4)\times4.8$ $x^{2}-4x=9.6x-19.2$ Let's move all the terms to the left side: $x^{2}-4x-9.6x+19.2=0$ $x^{2}-13.6x+19.2=0$ Now we can use the quadratic formula to solve the equation: $a=1$ $b=-13.6$ $c=19.2$ I'll solve it by parts: $D=(-13.6)^{2}-4\times1\times19.2=184,96-76.8=108.16$ Since our Discriminant ($D$) is positive we now know we'll get two answers: $x=\frac{13.6+-\sqrt 108.16}{2}$ $x=\frac{13.6+10.4}{2}$ $x=12$ and $x=\frac{13.6-10.4}{2}$ $x=1.6$ As mentioned before the value of $y$ is 4 less than $x$, if we try it with the values we just calculated: $y=x-4$ $y=1.6-4=-2.4$ $y=12-4=8$ We got $-2.4$ and $8$. Since we're calculating a distance, distance is never negative. Because of that we know for sure that $8$ is the real value of $y$. So $12$ is the value of $x$ that we're looking for.
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