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Synthetic division And the Remainder theorem

One factor of f(x)=4x^3-4x^2-16x+16 is (x – 2). What are all the roots of the function? Use the Remainder Theorem.
A) x = 1, x = 2, or x = 4
B) x = –2, x = 1, or x = 2
C) x = 2, x = 4, or x = 16
D) x = –16, x = 2, or x = 16

User Unglued
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2 Answers

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Answer:

The answer to this question is "B.) x = -2, x = 1, or x = 2"

User Xrcwrn
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The remainder theorem says that if
x-c is a factor of a polynomial
p(x), then the remainder upon dividing
(p(x))/(x-c) is 0 so that there exists a lower degree polynomial
q(x) as the quotient:


(p(x))/(x-c)=q(x)

Using the fact that
x-2 is a factor, you can find a quadratic
q(x) which is easy to factorize further.

Synthetic division yields


q(x)=4x^2+4x-8

which can be factored further as


4(x^2+x-2)=4(x+2)(x-1)

So,


f(x)=4x^3-4x^2-16x+16=4(x-2)(x+2)(x-1)

The roots are then
x=-2,1,2.


Synthetic division And the Remainder theorem One factor of f(x)=4x^3-4x^2-16x+16 is-example-1
User E Player
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