MedVision ad

Quadratic Equations: The Problem with Roots (1 Viewer)

FDownes

Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2007
Messages
197
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
I gots me a question that I just can't seem to solve. I was hoping someone here could help me out by explaining it to me. So here it is;

Find the value of n for which the equation (n + 2)x^2 + 3x - 5 = 0 has one root triple the other.

EDIT: And another one;

Find the values of p for which x^2 - x + 3p - 2 > 0 for all x.
 
Last edited:

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
x^2 + (3/(n+2))x - 5/(n+2) = 0

a+3a = -3/(n+2)
a*3a = -5/(n+2)

4a = -3/(n+2)
3a^2 = -5/(n+2)

Simultaneous equation, so isolate 1/(n+2):
4a/-3 = 1/(n+2)
3a^2/-5 = 1/(n+2)
So,
4a/-3 = 3a^2/-5
20a=9a^2
9a^2-20a=0
a(9a-20)=0
a=0 or a= 20/9
Sub into one of the initial equations (I'd suggest the 4a = ... one) to get:
Inconsistency, and:
-80/27=1/(n+2)
n=-197/80

Sub this back in: -(27/80)x^2 + 3x - 5 = 0 and solve to get roots of x= 2.22 and 6.66

Lovely.
 

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Find the values of p for which x^2 - x + 3p - 2 > 0 for all x.

I won't do it, but I'll give you hints:

You want to make the equation have NO roots. How do you figure out how many roots there are?

Discriminant.

Take the discriminant and find the value of p that makes it less than zero.
 

FDownes

Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2007
Messages
197
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Yes! Thank you very very much! I've been puzzling over that first question for ages!

EDIT: Got the second one too. Pretty easy once you think about it, I was just being lazy. :)
 
Last edited:

FDownes

Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2007
Messages
197
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Damn, stuck again. Here's the problem;

Solve 2^(2x +1) - 5 x 2^x + 2 = 0

I can see it's an equation reducible to a quadratic, the problem is the form it's in...
 
Joined
Mar 3, 2005
Messages
2,359
Location
Wollongong
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
22x+1 - 5.2x + 2 = 2.(22x) - 5.2x + 2 = 2.(2x)2 - 5.2x + 2

let 2x be "a"

then you have a simple quadratic.
 
Last edited:

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top