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Find all the integers,b, that make up the trinomial x2 + bx + 10 factorable.

User Argaz
by
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1 Answer

5 votes

By the fundamental theorem of algebra, we can write


x^2+bx+10=(x-r_1)(x-r_2)

Expanding the right hand side, we get


x^2+bx+10=x^2-(r_1+r_2)x+r_1r_2\implies\begin{cases}r_1+r_2=-b\\r_1r_2=10\end{cases}

We want
b to be an integer, which means
r_1,r_2 must also be integers. This means
r_1,r_2 must be factors of 10. There are several possibilities:


r_1=\pm10,r_2=\pm1\implies b=-(10+1)=-11\text{ or }b=-(-10-1)=11


r_1=\pm5,r_2=\pm2\implies b=-(5+2)=-7\text{ or }b=-(-5-2)=7

So there are 4 possible values for
b: -11, -7, 7, and 11.

User Schlueter
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4.3k points