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A quadratic equation has exactly one real number solution. Which is the value of its discriminant?

O-1
O0
O 1
O2

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

(B) 0

Explanation:

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User Ahmed Taher
by
4.7k points
4 votes

Answer: The determinant must be zero.

Explanation:

For a quadratic equation

a*x^2 + b*x + c = 0

The discriminant is:

D = b^2 - 4*a*c

and the solutions can be finded as:


x = (-b+- √(D) )/(2*a)

If D > 0 we have two real solutions

if D = 0 we only have one solution, x = -b/2a

If D < 0 we will have comples solutions, as we will have a negative number inside a square root.

Knowing that for this equation we have only one solution, then we can know that the determinant must be equal to zero.

User SergioAraujo
by
5.5k points