Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Rational and Radical Equations

Understanding Extraneous Solutions

In this lesson:

  • Solve rational equations using the LCD method
  • Solve radical equations using isolate-raise-check
  • Identify and explain extraneous solutions
Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

What You Will Be Able to Do

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Solve rational equations by multiplying by the LCD
  2. Solve radical equations by isolating the radical and raising to a power
  3. Identify and discard extraneous solutions by checking in the original equation
  4. Explain WHY extraneous solutions arise for both equation types
  5. State domain restrictions for rational and radical equations
Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Recall: Fractions and the LCD

  • LCD (least common denominator): the smallest expression divisible by every denominator
  • Multiplying fractions: — multiply numerator only
  • Denominator = 0: makes the fraction undefined — excluded from any domain

Can you find the LCD of and ?

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

A Puzzle: Where Did the Answer Go?

Look at this equation and follow the algebra step shown:

"Cancel from both sides"

Now substitute back into the original:

Division by zero. The equation is broken.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Multiplying by Zero Breaks Everything

The step "cancel " is really multiplying both sides by

The multiplication property requires . When : we multiplied by .

An extraneous solution is a candidate that algebra produces but the original equation rejects.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Domain Restrictions Come Before Algebra

Before solving, identify every that makes a denominator zero — these are excluded.

Example: → domain: ,

Excluded values are automatically rejected — no algebra check needed.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Rational Equation: LCD Method in Action

Solve:

Domain: , . LCD:

Multiply both sides by :

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Rational Equation: Solve and Check

From previous slide:

Check both: ✓ and

Neither solution is 0 or −1, so both are valid.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Worked Example: Rational Equation (Extraneous)

Solve:

Domain: . LCD:

Multiply both sides by :

But violates the domain restriction .

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Your Turn: Apply the LCD Method

Solve

  1. What is the domain restriction?
  2. What value does the algebra produce?
  3. Is the solution valid or extraneous?

Try it before advancing.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Why Non-Reversible Steps Break the Chain

Two-panel diagram showing valid vs. invalid multiplication step

  • Valid: multiply by a constant — the step is reversible (divide back)
  • Invalid for some x: multiply by a variable expression — it equals zero for certain -values
  • Multiplying by zero produces — true for any equation, meaning nothing
Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Checking Closes the Implication Chain

The check is a logical requirement — not arithmetic double-checking.

The implication: IF the equation holds AND , THEN

When , the assumption was false — the chain broke.

Checking in the original equation detects the break.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Predict: Can We Cancel Here?

Can we cancel from ?

A. Yes — canceling gives , false → no solution.

B. No — canceling is invalid because could be zero.

Commit to A or B, then advance.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Why Both Answers Reach the Same Place

Both A and B conclude: no solution — for different reasons.

  • Canceling: is a contradiction → no solution ✓
  • LCD path: multiply by ; plus excluded ✓

Domain restrictions make explicit what canceling assumes silently.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Same Risk, Different Equation Type

Rational equations: multiplying by variable LCD might be multiplying by zero.

Radical equations use a similar risky step — which one?

  • LCD step: valid only when the expression
  • Squaring: valid forward, but introduces an extra branch on the return

The same checking logic applies to both.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Three Steps for Every Radical Equation

A radical equation has a variable inside a radical sign.

Always in this order:

  1. Isolate the radical on one side
  2. Raise both sides to the index power (square for √, cube for ∛)
  3. Check all solutions in the original equation

Even-index radicals: domain requires radicand

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Predict First: Isolate or Square?

A student sees and immediately squares both sides:

Check: . ✗

What did the student do wrong?

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Why Squaring Before Isolating Fails

The error: . The correct expansion still contains a radical.

Correct approach: Isolate first: , then square: .

Check:

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Why Squaring Introduces Extraneous Solutions

Sign-loss diagram: A=B implies A²=B², but A²=B² implies A=B OR A=-B — two branches

Squaring loses sign information: means , so or

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Radical Equation with No Extraneous Solution

Solve:

Domain: . Radical already isolated.

Square:

Check:

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Radical Equation: One Extraneous Solution

Solve:

Domain: . Square:

: :

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Cube Root: No Extraneous Solution Here

Solve:

Cube both sides:

Check:

Cubing is one-to-one — no extraneous solutions possible.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Your Turn: Radical Equation with Check

Solve:

  1. State the domain restriction
  2. Square both sides (already isolated)
  3. Solve the resulting equation
  4. Check each candidate

Work through all four steps before advancing.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Checking: Required or Good Practice?

Reference table: equation type, non-reversible step, checking required

  • Required: after any non-reversible step
  • Always good practice: even when not required
Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Applying Three Steps to a Nested Radical

Solve:

Square outer radical:

Square inner radical:

Check:

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Who Kept a False Solution?

Check each student's answer in the original equation:

Student A: → reports and

Student B: → reports

Student C: → reports

Which student(s) retained an extraneous solution?

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Mixed Practice: No Scaffolding Provided

For each: state domain, solve, check, give solution set.

Work alone before comparing with a partner.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

What You Can Do Now

Rational: multiply by LCD → solve → check

Radical: isolate → raise to power → check

✓ Checking is logically required after non-reversible steps

⚠️ Domain restrictions go first — before any algebra

⚠️ Isolate the radical before squaring

⚠️ Odd-index roots don't produce extraneous solutions

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2
Rational and Radical Equations | Lesson 2 of 2

Next Lesson: Solving Quadratic Equations

HSA.REI.B.4 — the quadratic formula always produces two candidates.

The same discipline applies: interpret both in context and decide which are valid.

The checking habit you built today carries directly forward.

Grade 9 Algebra | HSA.REI.A.2

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Solve rational and radical equations