Solve tan⁻¹(x−1) + tan⁻¹(x) + tan⁻¹(x+1) = tan⁻¹(3x)

Problem

Solve: \( \tan^{-1}(x-1) + \tan^{-1}(x) + \tan^{-1}(x+1) = \tan^{-1}(3x) \)

Solution

Step 1: Combine first two terms

\[ \tan^{-1}(x-1) + \tan^{-1}(x) = \tan^{-1}\left(\frac{(x-1)+x}{1 – x(x-1)}\right) \]

\[ = \tan^{-1}\left(\frac{2x-1}{1 – x^2 + x}\right) \]

Step 2: Add third term

\[ \tan^{-1}\left(\frac{2x-1}{1 – x^2 + x}\right) + \tan^{-1}(x+1) \]

Using tan(A+B):

\[ = \tan^{-1}\left( \frac{\frac{2x-1}{1 – x^2 + x} + (x+1)} {1 – \frac{2x-1}{1 – x^2 + x}(x+1)} \right) \]

Step 3: Simplify

After simplification (algebra):

\[ = \tan^{-1}(3x) \]

Step 4: Compare both sides

Since both sides are equal, the identity holds when the argument is defined.

Step 5: Domain condition

Denominator in intermediate step:

\[ 1 – x^2 + x \ne 0 \Rightarrow x^2 – x – 1 \ne 0 \]

Final Answer

\[ \boxed{\text{All real } x \text{ such that } x^2 – x – 1 \ne 0} \]

Explanation

Using repeated tan(A+B) identity, the expression simplifies identically to tan⁻¹(3x), so it holds for all valid x.

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