e^x + x = 5
How do you solve this and what is the answer? It is a review question for a math quiz and I have tried many times to solve this. It will probably require natural logs because that is what I am doing currently.
e^x + x = 5
How do you solve this and what is the answer? It is a review question for a math quiz and I have tried many times to solve this. It will probably require natural logs because that is what I am doing currently.
(e^x + x) - x = (5) - xOriginally posted by golfinguy4
e^x + x = 5
How do you solve this and what is the answer? It is a review question for a math quiz and I have tried many times to solve this. It will probably require natural logs because that is what I am doing currently.
e^x = 5 - x
ln(e^x) = ln(5 - x)
thus, x = ln(5 - x).
i don't know if that's right though...
i forgot to mention that ln e^x = x.
or was it e^(ln x) = x?
e^(ln(x)) = ln(e^(x)) = x
e^x != x
I have gotten that far. However, x=ln(5-x) doesn't solve for x because there are x's on both sides of the equation.
P.S. It is both
1.30656
i got the value by writing a program to find values that fit the equation. i'm just as baffled as y'all are, but hopefully this will help
I don't think that equation can be solved non-numerically. I have Mathematica, and it gave the answer as
x = 5 - ProductLog[e^5]
which doesn't say much more than the original equation. It numerically evaluates to
1.3065586410395
which is about as good an answer as you're going to get.
If this is for a high school algebra class, I think your teacher goofed.
yfg, I can get that answer graphically by finding the intersection on my calc but I want to be able to find it algebraically b/c that is the way my teacher wants us to solve it.
Procyon: What the heck is productlog?
P.S. It is for a Pre-Calc class and from the book.
i'm in pre-calc too, and i've never seen that kind of thing before. i think the book made a mistake or something
According to Mathematica:Originally posted by golfinguy4
Procyon: What the heck is productlog?
ProductLog[z] satisfies the differential equation dw/dz = w/(z(1+w)).
It's approximately equal to x - x^2 + 3/2 x^3 - 8/3 x^4.
There's apparently no way to solve this algebraically. I think your book is probably in error.
I saw my teacher today. She told me that it couldn't be done algebraically and the book was only wanting me to do it graphically. I assumed that any problem could be solved more than 1 way, guess I was wrong.