261,587 views
17 votes
17 votes
Solve the following quadratic equation using the quadratic formula: 6x^2 + 3x + 2 = 0

User Deowk
by
2.6k points

1 Answer

20 votes
20 votes

The Quadratic formula is:


x=\frac{-b\pm\sqrt[]{b^2-4ac}}{2a}

Given the Quadratic equation:


6x^2+3x+2=0​

You can see that it has this form:


ax^2+bx+c=0

Then, in this case:


\begin{gathered} a=6 \\ b=3 \\ c=2 \end{gathered}

Therefore, you can substitute values into the Quadratic formula:


x=\frac{-(3)\pm\sqrt[]{(3)^2-4(6)(2)}}{(2)(6)}

Evaluate:


\begin{gathered} x=\frac{-3\pm\sqrt[]{^{}-39}}{12} \\ \end{gathered}

Notice that the Radicand (the value inside the root) is negative.

By definition:


i=\sqrt[]{-1}

Then you can rewrite it in this form:


x=\frac{-3\pm i\sqrt[]{^{}39}}{12}

Therefore, you get that the answer is:


\begin{gathered} x_1=\frac{-3-i\sqrt[]{^{}39}}{12} \\ \\ \\ x_2=\frac{-3+i\sqrt[]{^{}39}}{12} \end{gathered}

User Wdm
by
2.8k points