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Solve the discriminant

Solve the discriminant-example-1
User Pjcabrera
by
8.9k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

a

Explanation:

given a quadratic equation in standard form

ax² + bx + c = 0 ( a ≠ 0 )

then the discriminant

Δ = b² - 4ac

• if b² - 4ac > 0 then 2 real solutions

• if b² - 4ac = 0 then 2 real and equal solutions

• if b² - 4ac < 0 then no real solutions

given


(3)/(4) x² - 3x = - 4 ( add 4 to both sides )


(3)/(4) x² - 3x + 4 = 0 ← in standard form

with a =
(3)/(4) b = - 3 , c = 4

then

b² - 4ac = (- 3)² - ( 4 ×
(3)/(4) × 4) = 9 - 12 = - 3

since b² - 4ac < 0 then equation has no real solutions

User Eraxillan
by
8.2k points
6 votes

Answer:

a. -3; no real solutions.

Explanation:

Discriminant


\boxed{b^2-4ac }\quad\textsf{when}\:ax^2+bx+c=0


\textsf{When }\:b^2-4ac > 0 \implies \textsf{two real solutions}.


\textsf{When }\:b^2-4ac=0 \implies \textsf{one real solution}.


\textsf{When }\:b^2-4ac < 0 \implies \textsf{no real solutions}.

Given equation:


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

Add 4 to both sides of the equation so that it is in standard form:


\implies (3)/(4)x^2-3x+4=-4+4


\implies (3)/(4)x^2-3x+4=0

Therefore, the variables are:


a=(3)/(4), \quad b=-3, \quad c=4

Substitute these values into the discriminant formula to find the value of the discriminant:


\begin{aligned}\implies b^2-4ac&amp;=(-3)^2-4\left((3)/(4)\right)(4)\\&amp;=9-(3)(4)\\&amp;=9-12\\&amp;=-3\\\end{aligned}

Therefore, as -3 < 0, the discriminant is less than zero.

This means there are no real solutions.

User Santosh Sharma
by
8.4k points

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