Lesson 12: The Golden Rule of Balance: Addition/Subtraction

The Equals Sign as a Scale

An equation is like a balance scale. If the scale is balanced (\(A = B\)), then adding or removing the same amount from both sides will keep it balanced. This is the Addition Property of Equality.

Isolation

To "solve" an equation for \(x\), we must isolate it (get it by itself). We do this by applying the Inverse Operation.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Undoing Addition

Solve: \(x + 12 = 30\)

Example 2: Undoing Subtraction

Solve: \(x - 7 = -2\)

Example 3: Variable on the Right

Solve: \(15 = 4 + x\)

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In Quantum Mechanics, we often have to "normalize" equations. If we have a wavefunction \(\psi\), and we know that \(\psi_{measured} = \psi_{ideal} + \text{noise}\), we solve for the ideal state by "subtracting the noise" from both sides. This concept of mathematical balance is what keeps physical laws "true" even as we add complexity to our models.