ninetypercent
ninety ninety ninety
EDIT: dw about this question. scroll down to Q2. need help with that
Thanks
Thanks
Last edited:
i) P'(z)=5z^4+3az^2+b2. consider the polynomial P(z) = z^5 + az^3 + bz - c, where a, b and c are positive real numbers.
(i) show that P(z) has exactly one real root
(ii) hence show that P(z) has four complex roots with at least two with negative real parts
lol, I'm verifying for only a real root. So say z is a real root the inequality holds.@ shaon0, why does
5[(z^2+3a/10)^2+b/5-9a^2/100] >= 5[9a^2/100+b/5-9a^2/100] ?
You're suggesting that (z^2 + 3a/10)^2 >= (3a/10)^2 but that is not necessarily true as z^2 may well be negative (since a complex number squared may be smaller than zero).
Yeah, sorry about that. Didn't have much time to think about it but your methods what i would have used.for ii) the question refers to real parts, not imaginary parts.
continueing from shaon0, using the sum of roots we get
x+iy+x-iy+A+iB+A-iB+R=0, where R is the real root.
2x+2A=-R
from i) we know p(0)=-c<0, therefore, R>0 and -R<0
It follows then that either x, A or both are <0.
What shaon0 did looks fine. The polynomial is monotonically increasing therefore it must have only one real root.@ shaon0, why does
5[(z^2+3a/10)^2+b/5-9a^2/100] >= 5[9a^2/100+b/5-9a^2/100] ?
You're suggesting that (z^2 + 3a/10)^2 >= (3a/10)^2 but that is not necessarily true as z^2 may well be negative (since a complex number squared may be smaller than zero).