Let a,b,c be nonzero real numbers and let a^2−b^2=bc and b^2−c^2=ca. Prove that a^2−c^2=ab.

neudateaLp

neudateaLp

Answered question

2022-11-24

Let a , b , c be nonzero real numbers and let a 2 b 2 = b c and b 2 c 2 = c a. Prove that a 2 c 2 = a b.
The solution strategy given in the course was to scale the two given equations by s = 1 c , resulting in a 2 b 2 = b c becoming a 2 b 2 = b and b 2 c 2 = c a becoming b 2 1 = a. c is basically being set to 1, but I don't understand the justification. Doesn't scaling by 1 c by definition not change the equations, since ( a / c ) 2 ( b / c ) 2 = ( b / c ) ( c / c ) a 2 b 2 c 2 = b c c 2 a 2 b 2 = b c
Where is mistake?

Answer & Explanation

Aurora Hutchinson

Aurora Hutchinson

Beginner2022-11-25Added 10 answers

You can think of this scaling as dividing all equalities by c 2 , which is valid because c 0. This division basically reduces a 3-variables problem into a 2-variables problem, which should be more tractable.
Let A = a / c, B = b / c and C = c / c = 1. Then, we have
a 2 b 2 = b c A 2 B 2 = B ; b 2 c 2 = c a B 2 1 = A .
It follows that
A 2 1 = ( A 2 B 2 ) + ( B 2 1 ) = B + A .
Thus, it remains that we show A + B = A B. Note that
B = A 2 B 2 = A 2 ( A + 1 ) = A 2 A 1
so
(i) A B = A + B A 3 A 2 A = A 2 1 A 3 2 A 2 A + 1 = 0.
To show that (i) holds, we use
1 + A = B 2 = ( A 2 A 1 ) 2 = A 4 2 A 3 A 2 + 2 A + 1
which implies
(ii) 0 = A 4 2 A 3 A 2 + A = A ( A 3 2 A 2 A + 1 ) .
Now we are done: (ii) implies that (i) is true, therefore we indeed have A B = A + B.

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