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Use synthetic division to show that the number given to the right of the equation is a solution of the equation. Then solve the polynomial equation.

2x^(3)+x^(2)-8x-4=0; 2

User LolaRun
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


x = 2 \: or \: x = - 2 \: or \: x = - (1)/(2)

Explanation:

The given polynomial equation is


2 {x}^(3) + {x}^(2) - 8x - 4 = 0

We perform the synthetic division as shown in the attachment by dividing by x-2.

This gives a remainder of 0 and a quotient of


2 {x}^(2) + 5x + 2

This means the polynomial equation becomes:


(x - 2)(2 {x}^(2) + 5x + 2) = 0

We factor the quadratic term by splitting the middle term;


(x - 2)(2 {x}^(2) + 4x +x + 2) = 0


(x - 2)(2 x(x+ 2) +1(x + 2) )= 0

Collect common factors again:


(x - 2)((x+ 2)(2x + 1) = 0

The solution is:


x = 2 \: or \: x = - 2 \: or \: x = - (1)/(2)

Use synthetic division to show that the number given to the right of the equation-example-1
User Leo Brueggeman
by
7.0k points
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