Respuesta :
No solution: because the absolute value is positive and can't equal a negative
|x| = -1
One solution: because zero only has one sign
|x| = 0 ⇒ x = 0
Two solutions: absolute value is positive whether x is positive or negative.
|x| = 2 ⇒ x = 2 or x = -2
Absolute value equations |a|=b have two solutions only if b>0, because it means that a=b or a=-b. Example:
[tex] |x + 1| = 1 \\ x = 0 \: or \: x = - 2[/tex]
Absolute value equations |a|=b have one solution only if b=0, because 0=-0. Example:
[tex] |x + 1| = 0 \\ x = - 1[/tex]
Absolute value equations |a|=b have no solution only if b<0, because absolute value can't have a negative value. Example:
[tex] |x + 1| = - 1 \\ x \in \varnothing [/tex]
[tex] |x + 1| = 1 \\ x = 0 \: or \: x = - 2[/tex]
Absolute value equations |a|=b have one solution only if b=0, because 0=-0. Example:
[tex] |x + 1| = 0 \\ x = - 1[/tex]
Absolute value equations |a|=b have no solution only if b<0, because absolute value can't have a negative value. Example:
[tex] |x + 1| = - 1 \\ x \in \varnothing [/tex]