<p>Given the <code>root</code> of a binary search tree, return <em>a <strong>balanced</strong> binary search tree with the same node values</em>. If there is more than one answer, return <strong>any of them</strong>.</p> <p>A binary search tree is <strong>balanced</strong> if the depth of the two subtrees of every node never differs by more than <code>1</code>.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Example 1:</strong></p> <img alt="" src="https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2021/08/10/balance1-tree.jpg" style="width: 500px; height: 319px;" /> <pre> <strong>Input:</strong> root = [1,null,2,null,3,null,4,null,null] <strong>Output:</strong> [2,1,3,null,null,null,4] <b>Explanation:</b> This is not the only correct answer, [3,1,4,null,2] is also correct. </pre> <p><strong>Example 2:</strong></p> <img alt="" src="https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2021/08/10/balanced2-tree.jpg" style="width: 224px; height: 145px;" /> <pre> <strong>Input:</strong> root = [2,1,3] <strong>Output:</strong> [2,1,3] </pre> <p> </p> <p><strong>Constraints:</strong></p> <ul> <li>The number of nodes in the tree is in the range <code>[1, 10<sup>4</sup>]</code>.</li> <li><code>1 <= Node.val <= 10<sup>5</sup></code></li> </ul>