Transcript 3 zeros
Unit 3.3Polynomial Equations
Continued
Objectives
Divide polynomials with synthetic division
Combine graphical and algebraic methods to solve
polynomial equations
Use the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra to find
the number of complex solutions of a polynomial
equation
Find the complex solutions of polynomial
equations
Division of Polynomials; Synthetic Division
Suppose f(x) is a cubic function and we know that a is a
solution of f (x) = 0. We can write (x - a) as a factor of f
(x), and if we divide this factor into the cubic function, the
quotient will be a quadratic factor of f (x). If there are
additional real solutions to f(x) = 0, this quadratic factor
can be used to find the remaining solutions.
4
3
Divide 𝑥 + 6𝑥 − 5𝑥 + 4 by x + 2
Long Division
Synthetic Division
Example
If x = 2 is a solution of x3 + 6x2 – x – 30 = 0, find the
remaining solutions.
Solution
Example (cont)
Thus the quotient is ________________, with remainder 0, so
x – 2 is a factor and
Y
18
12
6
X
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
-6
-12
-18
The solutions are x = ___, __, and ___.
-24
-30
-36
1
2
3
Multiplicity
A graph touches but does not cross the x-axis at
a zero of even multiplicity, and it crosses the xaxis at a zero of odd multiplicity.
Example
The weekly profit for a product is P(x) = – 0.1x3 + 11x2 – 80x – 2000
thousand dollars, where x is the number of thousands of units
produced and sold. To find the number of units that gives break-even,
graph the function using a window representing up to 50 thousand
units and find one x-intercept of the graph.
We use the viewing window
[0, 50] by [–2500, 8000].
Example (cont)
b. Use synthetic division to find a quadratic factor of P(x).
Solution
Example (cont)
c. Find all of the zeros of P(x).
Solution
Example:
Determine all possible rational solutions:
3𝑥 3 + 3𝑥 2 − 9𝑥 + 12 = 0
Example
Solve the equation 2x4 + 10x3 + 13x2 – x – 6 = 0.