160k views
0 votes
Question 22. How could the following equation be factored to find the zeros?

Question 22. How could the following equation be factored to find the zeros?-example-1

1 Answer

2 votes

Given the equation:


y=x^3-3x^2-4x

first notice that on the expression on the right, all the terms have at least one common factor x, then, we can write it as follows:


x^3-3x^2-4x=x(x^2-3x-4)

then, the expression that we have between the parenthesis, can be factored as follows:


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

then, the original equation can be factored like this:


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

which has zeros x = 0, x = 4 and x = -1

User FiftiN
by
8.1k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories