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I am struggling to prove which of these two terms is bigger in magnitude.

Assumption: \begin{align} A < \theta \end{align}

Term 1: \begin{align} \sqrt{\delta^2 \theta^4 + 4 \theta^2 A (\epsilon - 1 ) (1 + \varphi)} - \sqrt{\delta^2 \theta^2 A^2 + 4 \theta A^2 (\epsilon - 1 ) (1 + \varphi)} \end{align}

Term 2: \begin{align} \delta \theta A - \delta \theta^2 \end{align}

Signs of the coefficients: All coefficients are positive and $\epsilon > 1$.

My attempt: I have noticed that if we ignore the second term under the square roots Term 1 is the negative of Term 2. So I have tried to work with inequalities but I was unsuccessful. Does anyone have any ideas how to tackle this?

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  • $\begingroup$ How many of these terms are positive? $\endgroup$
    – Peter Job
    Commented May 6, 2023 at 22:11
  • $\begingroup$ All of them are positive $\endgroup$
    – NC520
    Commented May 6, 2023 at 22:26
  • $\begingroup$ I have clarified it in the question. Thanks. $\endgroup$
    – NC520
    Commented May 6, 2023 at 22:39

2 Answers 2

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Let $k = \frac{4}{\delta^2}(\epsilon-1)(1+\varphi)$. Now we divide both the equations by $\delta\theta$, and see that it's equivalent to

$$\sqrt{\theta^2+kA} - \sqrt{A^2+k\frac{A^2}{\theta}} \qquad\text{vs} \qquad A - \theta$$.

As @Fotis said the RHS is negative here and the LHS isn't. I'm going to assume that the question meant the absolute value of these terms, which makes the right hand side $\theta - A > 0$.

When $k=0$ we have that the LHS and RHS are equal, so all we need to show is that the LHS is increasing or decreasing with respect to $k$ and we are done.

Differentiating with respect to $k$ we get

$$\partial_k(LHS) = \frac{1}{2}\left[A(\theta^2 + kA)^{-1/2} - \frac{A^2}{\theta}(A^2 + k\frac{A^2}{\theta})^{-1/2}\right]$$ So now we want to find when

$$\theta(\theta^2 + kA)^{-1/2} > (1 + \frac{k}{\theta})^{-1/2}$$ where we have multiplied by $\frac{\theta}{A}>0$.

This happens when $$\theta^2+k\theta>\theta^2+kA$$ so... all the time!

This shows that the derivative with respect to $k$ is positive and thus the LHS increases as $k$ increases so the LHS is bigger than the RHS for all $k>0$.

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Let $q=4θΑ(\epsilon-1)(1+φ)$
Then the first term becomes: $$X=\sqrt{δ^{2}θ^{4}+θq}-\sqrt{δ^{2}θ^{2}Α^{2}+Αq}$$ Using the fact that θ>Α we get: $$X>\sqrt{δ^{2}θ^{2}Α^{2}+Αq}-\sqrt{δ^{2}θ^{2}Α^{2}+Αq}=0 $$ $$\Rightarrow X>0$$

On the other hand, for term 2: $$Y=δθΑ-δθ^{2}$$ we have that: $$Y<δθ^2-δθ^{2}=0$$ $$\Rightarrow Y<0$$ So in the end we have: $$X>0>Y$$ Which means that the first term is bigger than the second one.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thank for your answer. It helped a lot. Do you think it is possible to determine which one is bigger in magnitude? $\endgroup$
    – NC520
    Commented May 7, 2023 at 17:29
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    $\begingroup$ I think that's exactly what @Peter Job showed in his answer bellow $\endgroup$
    – Fotis
    Commented May 7, 2023 at 17:34

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