Let x and a be real numbers > 0. Prove that $\frac{1}{2}(x+\frac{a}{x}) \ge \sqrt{a}$
My idea is that I'm going to use $a>b \iff a^2>b^2$ since we are only dealing with postive real numbers we won't run into problems with the root.
$\frac{1}{2}(x+\frac{a}{x}) \ge \sqrt{a} \iff (\frac{1}{2}(x+\frac{a}{x}))^2 = \frac{1}{4}(x+\frac{a}{x})(x+\frac{a}{x})= \frac{1}{4}(x^2+2a+\frac{a^2}{x^2}) \ge \sqrt{a}^2=a$
And from that we get:
$\frac{1}{4}x^2 +\frac{1}{2}a+\frac{a^2}{4x^2} \ge a$
I don't really know how to proceed from here. What about looking at different possibilities for the values of a and x?
Let x>a. Then:
$\frac{1}{4}x^2 +\frac{1}{2}a+\frac{a^2}{4x^2} \ge \frac{1}{4}a^2 +\frac{1}{2}a+\frac{a^2}{4x^2} \ge a \iff \frac{1}{4}a^2x^2 +\frac{1}{2}ax^2+\frac{a^2}{4} \ge ax^2$
And now I don't know how to prcoeed from here and doubt that my approach is correct. Can someone please help me out here? Tanks in advance.
a.m.-g.m.-inequalitytag is necessarily appropriate here, as the asker shows no evidence of wanting to use it, or indeed knowing the inequality in the first place. This doesn't appear to be a question about the am-gm inequality. – Theo Bendit Jan 03 '19 at 23:59