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8. Nate wrote the polynomial shown below on the board. Which value(s) of "n" would make the polynomial factorable? 16x2 - I. q 9 II. -9 III. 25 a. I only b. I and III only w c. I and II only d. I, II and III

User Phyllis Diller
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1 Answer

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By definition, a Perfect square trinomial has the following form:


a^2\pm2ab+b^2

Perfect square trinomials can be expressed in Squared-binomial form, as following:


(a\pm b)^2

In this case, you know that the first term of the Perfect square trinomial Tia wrote on the board, is:


4x^2

And the last term is:


25

Then you can identify that:


a^2=4x^2

Solving for "a", you get:


\begin{gathered} a=\sqrt[]{4x^2} \\ a=2x \end{gathered}

Notice that:


b^2=25

Solving for "b", you get:


\begin{gathered} b=\sqrt[]{25} \\ b=5 \end{gathered}

Knowing "a" and "b", you can write the following Squared-binomial:


(2x+5)^2

And determine that the missing term is:


2ab=2(2x)(5)=20x

Therefore, the missing value is not a Perfect square, because it is not obtained by multiplying two equal Integers.

The answer is: Option B.

User Iamanigeeit
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