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I recently took my Honors Pre-Calc. exam. Wanting to get as many points as I possibly could, I circled and skipped several problems. However, I forgot to do this one, and wanted to know if I'm on the right track, because the answer I get for x doesn't work correctly. I've come up with a separate solution that comes close, but is off by .4 as well. \begin{align*} e^{2x} - 7e^x + 12 &= 0\\
e^{2x} - 7e^x &= -12 \\ e^x(1^2 - 7) &= -12\\
e^x &= \frac{-12}{1^2 - 7}\\
e^x &= 2\\
x &= \ln 2 \end{align*}

Putting this back into the equation doesn't work. I think I might have a problem with how I'm factoring, but I can't seem to fix it. The only other way I've tried comes closer, but still gives me a wrong answer.

Your help and suggestions are appreciated :).

  • 3
    $e^{2x} \neq e^x$2010-12-18
  • 0
    $ e^{2x}=e^x\cdot e^x\neq e^x\text{ for }x\neq0$2014-03-27

3 Answers 3

19

HINT $\rm\quad e^{\:2\:x} = (e^x)^2\:.\ $ Thus for $\rm\ y = e^x\ $ the equation is $\rm\ y^2 - 7\ y + 12 = 0\:$

  • 0
    Alright, that helps. Thank you.2010-12-18
4

Your error is in the third line. $e^{2x}$ is not equal to $e^x$ times $1^2$ (that would make $e^{2x}$ equal to $e^x\times 1 = e^x$). That line would read $$e^x(e^x - 7) = -12,$$ and that won't really help you. Bill's solution is the correct approach.

1

If you're good at factoring quadratic polynomials by staring at them (and I've seen lots of people who are surprisingly adept at that even if some of them can't do much else), then you can do this: $$ e^{2x} - 7 e^x + 12 = 0 $$ $$ (e^x - 3)(e^x - 4) = 0 $$ $$ e^x=3 \text{ or }e^x=4. $$ $$ x = \log_e 3\text{ or } x = \log_3 4. $$

  • 1
    The point of my posting hint was to leave some work for the reader. Why finish it?2011-12-07
  • 5
    If the reader were going to wade through year-old posts to solve a quadratic in $e^x$, wouldn't that qualify as "some work" in itself?2011-12-07