Solving \(\displaystyle{\sin{{\left({\frac{{{x}}}{{{x}^{{2}}+{1}}}}\right)}}}+{\sin{{\left({\frac{{{1}}}{{{x}^{{2}}+{x}+{2}}}}\right)}}}={0}\) Here is my way: First write the

amonitas3zeb

amonitas3zeb

Answered question

2022-04-03

Solving sin(xx2+1)+sin(1x2+x+2)=0
Here is my way:
First write the equation as
sin(x2(x2+1)+12(x2+x+2))cos(x2(x2+1)12(x2+x+2))=0
Then the real solution can be find by
x2(x2+1)+12(x2+x+2)=0
which gives x=-1.

Answer & Explanation

Ben Castillo

Ben Castillo

Beginner2022-04-04Added 13 answers

I do not know if this is more elegant.
Let f(x)=sinx,   g(x)=xx2+1 and h(x)=1x2+x+2
Then your equation becomes
f(g(x))+f(h(x))=0
Since f(x)=sinx is an odd function,
f(h(x))=f(h(x))
Then, your equation is that
f(g(x)t)=f(h(x))
It is known that in the range (π2,π2) the function f(x) is increasing, and since 12g(x)12 and 0<h(x)47 your equation is equivalent to
g(x)=h(x)xx2+1=1x2+x+2
Therefore, the real solution comes from
x3+2x2+2x+1=0,
which gives x=-1

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