Concept: For inverse tangent functions, the identity \[ \tan^{-1}a+\tan^{-1}b=\tan^{-1}\!\left(\frac{a+b}{1-ab}\right) \] is valid when \(ab<1\), with the principal value lying in \((-\pi/2,\pi/2)\).
Step 1: Apply the identity. Let \[ a=4x,\quad b=6x \] Then, \[ \tan^{-1}(4x)+\tan^{-1}(6x) = \tan^{-1}\!\left(\frac{10x}{1-24x^2}\right) \] Given: \[ \tan^{-1}\!\left(\frac{10x}{1-24x^2}\right)=\frac{\pi}{6} \]
Step 2: Take tangent on both sides. \[ \frac{10x}{1-24x^2}=\tan\frac{\pi}{6}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}} \]
Step 3: Solve for \(x\). \[ 10\sqrt{3}\,x=1-24x^2 \] \[ 24x^2+10\sqrt{3}\,x-1=0 \] Solving: \[ x=\frac{-10\sqrt{3}\pm\sqrt{300+96}}{48} =\frac{-10\sqrt{3}\pm\sqrt{396}}{48} =\frac{-10\sqrt{3}\pm6\sqrt{11}}{48} \]
Step 4: Check interval restriction. Given interval: \[ x\in\left[-\frac{1}{2\sqrt{6}},\,\frac{1}{2\sqrt{6}}\right] \] On numerical evaluation:
One root lies within the given interval
The other root lies outside the given interval Hence, only one value of \(x\) satisfies both the equation and the interval condition.
