Factorising quadratics

From testwiki
Revision as of 13:58, 11 July 2017 by imported>MaintenanceBot (Paragraph wrapping bug workaround)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Secondary Quadratic equations are equations of the form ax2+bx+c=0 where a, b and c are constants, a0 and x is a variable. In other words, a quadratic equation has at least one term of the variable, say x, raised to the exponent 2, e.g. x2 Template:Maths

Arranging terms

Arrange the quadratic into order: first the squared number ax2, then the number times x, bx, finally the constant value c.

Factorising quadratics

Form of quadratics: ax2+bx+c=0

To factorise:

  1. split the middle term so it adds to the original number, e.g., let b = (AD + BC), and
  2. multiplies to the constant times the first term, e.g., Ax times Bx equals ABx2, then a = AB,
  3. then bracket so the pronumeral (letter) is like this, e.g., (Ax + C)(Bx + D).

Checking

Multiplying the two terms: (Ax+C) and (Bx+D) with each other becomes:

Ax×Bx+Ax×D+C×Bx+C×D

which rearranges to:

ABx2+(AD+BC)x+CD

The final constant c=CD.

Examples

2m2+11m+5

=(2m+1)(m+5)

To check it, re-expand the answer to see if we get back to where we started from:

(2M+1)(M+5)

=2M×M+2M×5+1×M+1×5

=2m2+11m+5

See also

Template:Div col

Template:Div col end

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Tlx Template:Sisterlinks