Stage 9 · Rational Expressions & Equations

9.5  Rational Equations and How to Solve Them

Clear the denominators to escape the fraction — then check for the fake roots it leaves behind.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
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Point 3 of 5 in this lesson: 9.5.3 Where fake roots come from — and the check that catches them

9.5.3 Where fake roots come from — and the check that catches them

Multiplying both sides by the LCD is a legal move only when the LCD isn't zero. But the LCD is built out of denominators — the very things that are forbidden from being zero. If a candidate root happens to be one of those off‑limits values, the multiplication we did was illegal for that value, and the "root" it produced is a phantom: an extraneous root. The clearing step invented it. It is not a solution.

Why this happens

Multiplying an equation by an expression that equals 0 can turn a false statement into a true one (anything times 0 is 0, so both sides "agree"). That's how a value that breaks the original sneaks into the cleared equation as a candidate. The cure is simple and non‑negotiable: substitute every candidate back into the original and reject any that zero a denominator.

Worked rejection — a candidate that must be thrown out

Solve xx−3 = 2 + 3x−3. The off‑limits value is x = 3. The LCD is x−3; clear it (multiplying the lone 2 as well):

x = 2(x−3) + 3 → x = 2x − 6 + 3 → x = 2x − 3 → x = 3

The only candidate is x = 3 — but that's exactly the forbidden value! Substituting it back puts a 0 under both fractions in the original. So x = 3 is extraneous; we reject it. This equation has no solution.

Worked example — one kept, one tossed

Solve x−1 = 1x−1. Off‑limits: x = 1. LCD is x−1; clearing gives x² = 1, so x² − 1 = 0 → (x−1)(x+1) = 0, with candidates x = 1 and x = −1.

candidatedenominator x−1verdict
x = 11 − 1 = 0extraneous — reject
x = −1−1 − 1 = −2 ≠ 0valid ✓

Only x = −1 survives the gate. The candidate x = 1 looked like a root but zeros the denominator, so out it goes.

🎮 Try itEXTRANEOUS‑ROOT DETECTOR

Pick an equation. The widget shows the candidate roots, then substitutes each into the original denominators. A zero on the bottom means the root is a fake.

Equation:
eastmath.com · 9.5 Rational Equations and How to Solve Them · 9.5.3 Where fake roots come from — and the check that catches them