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Module 2: The Quadratic Formula: Section V: Quadratic Equations and Functions

This document discusses solving quadratic equations using the quadratic formula. It provides the quadratic formula, examples of using it to solve quadratic equations, and discusses interpreting the discriminant. The discriminant tells the nature of the solutions - positive and a perfect square means two rational solutions, positive but not a perfect square means two irrational solutions, zero means one rational solution, and negative means two complex solutions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views

Module 2: The Quadratic Formula: Section V: Quadratic Equations and Functions

This document discusses solving quadratic equations using the quadratic formula. It provides the quadratic formula, examples of using it to solve quadratic equations, and discusses interpreting the discriminant. The discriminant tells the nature of the solutions - positive and a perfect square means two rational solutions, positive but not a perfect square means two irrational solutions, zero means one rational solution, and negative means two complex solutions.

Uploaded by

Amri Awalludin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Haberman / Kling MTH 95

Section V: Quadratic Equations and Functions

Module 2: The Quadratic Formula

You should remember from your course on introductory algebra that you can use the quadratic
formula to solve quadratic equations.

The Quadratic Formula:

If ax 2  bx  c  0 , then x  b  b 2  4ac .
2a

EXAMPLE: Solve 2 x 2  5 x  10  0 using the quadratic formula.

SOLUTION: It might be helpful to note that a  2 , b  5 , and c   10 before we use the


quadratic formula.

5  5 2  4  2  (10)
x
22
5 25  80

4
5  105

4

5  105 5  105
Thus, the solutions are x  or x  , so the solution set is
4 4
 5  105 5  105 
 , .
 4 4 

5 9
EXAMPLE: Solve 2  .
x 2 x

SOLUTION: This isn’t a quadratic equation (in fact, it is a rational equation). But if we clear the
fractions by multiplying both sides of the equation be the least common
denominator (which is x 2 ) we will obtain a quadratic equation:
2

5 9
2 2

x x
 5   9 
 x2   2  2   x2   
 x   x 
 2 x2  5  9x
 2x2  9 x  5  0

Now, we can use the quadratic formula:

(9)  (9) 2  4(2)(5)


x
2(2)
9 81  40

4
9 41

4

 9  41 9  41 
Thus, the solution set is  , .
 4 4 

Try this one yourself and check your answer.


Use the quadratic formula to solve the equation 2 x 2  5 x  7 .

SOLUTION:

2 x2  5x  7
 2 x2  5x  7  0 (rewrite in standard form).

(5)  (5) 2  4(2)(7)


 x (use the quadratic formula)
2(2)
5 25  56

4
5 31

4
5  i 31
 (remember 1  i )
4

 5  i 31 5  i 31 
Thus, the solution set is  , .
 4 4 
3

EXAMPLE: Solve x 2  3x  4  0 using the quadratic formula. [Note: We solved this


equation by completing-the-square in the previous module.]

SOLUTION: It might be helpful to note that a  1 , b  3 , and c  4 before we use the


quadratic formula.

3  32  4  1  4
x
2 1
3  9  16

2
3  7

2
3  i 7

2

 3  i 7 3  i 7 
Thus, the solution set is  , .
 2 2 

Since the radicand is negative in the example above, the solutions to the quadratic equation
are complex numbers. The radicand in the quadratic formula is called the discriminant.

DEFINITION: The discriminant of the quadratic equation ax 2  bx  c  0 is

b 2  4ac .

EXAMPLE: The discriminant of the quadratic equation 5 x 2  3 x  2  0 is

b 2  4ac  (3)2  4  5  2
 9  40
  31

The discriminant tells us the nature of the solutions to any quadratic equation; see the table
below.
4

Table 1: The Discriminant

If the discriminant is… …then there…


…positive and a perfect square …are two rational solutions
…positive and not a perfect square …are two irrational solutions
…zero …is one rational solution
…negative …are two complex solutions

EXAMPLE: Describe the nature of the solutions to the quadratic equations based on their
discriminants.

a. 2 x 2  5 x  1 c. 3x 2  6 x  3  0

b. x 2  4 x   5 d. 4 x 2  7 x  2

SOLUTION:

a. 2 x 2  5 x  1  2 x 2  5 x  1  0

So the discriminant is ( 5) 2  4  2  1  17 . Since the discriminant is positive and not a


perfect square, there are two irrational solutions.

b. x 2  4 x   5  x 2  4 x  5  0

So the discriminant is ( 4) 2  4  1  5   4 . Since the discriminant is negative, there


are two complex solutions.

c. 3x 2  6 x  3  0

The discriminant is ( 6) 2  4  3  3  0 . Since the discriminant is zero, there is one


rational solution.

d. 4 x 2  7 x  2  4 x 2  7 x  2  0

So the discriminant is 7 2  4  4( 2)  81 . Since the discriminant is positive and a


perfect square, there are two rational solutions.

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