The equation has one extraneous solution which is n ≈ 2.38450287.
Given that,
The equation;
[tex]\dfrac{9}{n^2+1} =\dfrac{n+3}{4}[/tex]
We have to find,
How many extraneous solutions does the equation?
According to the question,
An extraneous solution is a solution value of the variable in the equations, that is found by solving the given equation algebraically but it is not a solution of the given equation.
To solve the equation cross multiplication process is applied following all the steps given below.
[tex]\rm \dfrac{9}{n^2+1} =\dfrac{n+3}{4}\\\\9 (4) = (n+3) (n^2+1)\\\\36 = n(n^2+1) + 3 (n^2+1)\\\\36 = n^3+ n + 3n^2+3\\\\n^3+ n + 3n^2+3 - 36=0\\\\n^3+ 3n^2+n -33=0\\[/tex]
The roots (zeros) are the x values where the graph intersects the x-axis. To find the roots (zeros), replace y
with 0 and solve for x. The graph of the equation is attached.
n ≈ 2.38450287
Hence, The equation has one extraneous solution which is n ≈ 2.38450287
For more information refer to the link.
https://brainly.com/question/15070282