Is trial and error the only way to work this out? Is there a formula for the roots of a quartic polynomial?3unitz said:i meant subbing in some values for x to see if it satisfies the equation and therefore is a solution.
you can use the formulas i gave before and solve for 3 unknowns:bored of sc said:Is trial and error the only way to work this out? Is there a formula for the roots of a quartic polynomial?
man i dnt get it how the values for my question which you subbed in are 1/6, - 1/18, 6/18, 3/18, 6/9. Are these the factors of 6 and 18? im lost at this part3unitz said:i meant subbing in some values for x to see if it satisfies the equation and therefore is a solution.
eg. say you have x^3 + 8x^2 - 7 = 0
sub in -1 for x, we see this satisfies the equation and is a solution.
this example is a monic polynomial (the highest power's coefficient is 1).
for non-monic polynomials like the polynomial in your question, theres a few more options we can consider as possible solutions.
eg. consider the non-monic polynomial P(x) = 4x^3 + 2x^2 - 14x + 3
if we look at the coefficient of the highest power and the last term (4 and 3 respectively) its also possible that we can try the values:
1/2, 3/2, 1/4, 3/4 and their negatives, as well as the obvious integer possibilities 1, 3.
with your question, 6 and 18 where the two coefficients i looked at, and tried similar combinations
eg. 1/6, - 1/18, 6/18, 3/18, 6/9
6/9 turned out to satisfy the equation so 6/9 = 2/3 was one of the solutions
yeah this is the method i would rather prefer, can someone use this method where you use the 4 formulas to work this question out. Sorry guys but i am just not getting it.3unitz said:you can use the formulas i gave before and solve for 3 unknowns:
Sum alpha = -b/a
Sum alpha.beta = c/a
Sum alpha.beta.gamma = -d/a
alpha.beta.gamma.delta = e/a
might be a little bit more messy, but would still would work.
consider P(x) = (x - a)(x - b), our solutions are a and b, if we expand this we get:M@ster P said:man i dnt get it how the values for my question which you subbed in are 1/6, - 1/18, 6/18, 3/18, 6/9. Are these the factors of 6 and 18? im lost at this part
let solutions be: x, -x, y, zM@ster P said:yeah this is the method i would rather prefer, can someone use this method where you use the 4 formulas to work this question out. Sorry guys but i am just not getting it.
ok in this post you mentioned you looked at the coefficient with the highest power which is 6 and the last term which is 18.3unitz said:i meant subbing in some values for x to see if it satisfies the equation and therefore is a solution.
eg. say you have x^3 + 8x^2 - 7 = 0
sub in -1 for x, we see this satisfies the equation and is a solution.
this example is a monic polynomial (the highest power's coefficient is 1).
for non-monic polynomials like the polynomial in your question, theres a few more options we can consider as possible solutions.
eg. consider the non-monic polynomial P(x) = 4x^3 + 2x^2 - 14x + 3
if we look at the coefficient of the highest power and the last term (4 and 3 respectively) its also possible that we can try the values:
1/2, 3/2, 1/4, 3/4 and their negatives, as well as the obvious integer possibilities 1, 3.
with your question, 6 and 18 where the two coefficients i looked at, and tried similar combinations
eg. 1/6, - 1/18, 6/18, 3/18, 6/9
6/9 turned out to satisfy the equation so 6/9 = 2/3 was one of the solutions