just expand and equate coefficientsnamburger said:Find all the pairs of values of the integers a and b for which the polynomial
P(x)= (ax+b)^2 −x is exactly divisible by both (x − 1) and (x − 4).
Help
Since it is devisible by (x-1) and (x-4), substituting x=1 or x=4 will yield P(x)=0namburger said:Find all the pairs of values of the integers a and b for which the polynomial
P(x)= (ax+b)^2 −x is exactly divisible by both (x − 1) and (x − 4).
Help
well done Namu, tacking 4 unit questions in year 11lyounamu said:Since it is devisible by (x-1) and (x-4), substituting x=1 or x=4 will yield P(x)=0
i.e. P(1) = (a . 1 + b)^2 - 1 = 0 ...(1)
And P(4) = (a . 4 +b)^2 -4 = 0...(2)
From the equation (1), a^2 + 2ab + b^2 - 1 = 0
(1) x 4: 4a ^2 + 8ab + 4b^2 - 4 = 0...(3)
From the equation (2), 16a^2 + 8ab + b^@ - 4 = 0
(2) - (3):12a^2 - 3b^2 = 0
4a^2 = b^2
b = 2a
Substitute 2a for the value of b in the equation (1)
i.e. a^2 + 2a . 2a + (2a)^2 - 1 = 0
a^2 + 4a^2 + 4a^2 - 1 = 0
9a^2 = 1
a^2 = 1/9
a = 1/3 or -1/3
b = 2a = 2 . 1/3
= 2/3
Or b = 2a = 2 . -1/3
= -2/3
You are joking, Andrew. You could do this with a single finger and virtually with an absence of mind & brain.vds700 said:well done Namu, tacking 4 unit questions in year 11
Nah. There is a whole 4 unit topic on polynomials, which is pretty much the 3 unit topic plus like two new things and a few proofs.lyounamu said:You are joking, Andrew. You could do this with a single finger and virtually with an absence of mind & brain.
By the way, I didn't know it was a 4 Unit question. I am assuming that this is harder 3 Unit question...(is it not?)
Ok. thanksmidifile said:Nah. There is a whole 4 unit topic on polynomials, which is pretty much the 3 unit topic plus like two new things and a few proofs.
Thanks for that.lyounamu said:Since it is devisible by (x-1) and (x-4), substituting x=1 or x=4 will yield P(x)=0
i.e. P(1) = (a . 1 + b)^2 - 1 = 0 ...(1)
And P(4) = (a . 4 +b)^2 -4 = 0...(2)
From the equation (1), a^2 + 2ab + b^2 - 1 = 0
(1) x 4: 4a ^2 + 8ab + 4b^2 - 4 = 0...(3)
From the equation (2), 16a^2 + 8ab + b^@ - 4 = 0
(2) - (3):12a^2 - 3b^2 = 0
4a^2 = b^2
b = 2a
Substitute 2a for the value of b in the equation (1)
i.e. a^2 + 2a . 2a + (2a)^2 - 1 = 0
a^2 + 4a^2 + 4a^2 - 1 = 0
9a^2 = 1
a^2 = 1/9
a = 1/3 or -1/3
b = 2a = 2 . 1/3
= 2/3
Or b = 2a = 2 . -1/3
= -2/3
Ah yeah.Iruka said:Namu, you lost one of the solutions in the middle of your working out!
If 4a^2 = b^2, then b = 2a or b=-2a.
Btw, the question specifies that a and b are integers (which is why you need to look at the other solution.)
Mine is Namu.namburger said:Thanks for that.
BTW is your name Nam, coz mine is xD
lol....i got the answer but didn't publish it since i was doing Chemistry.3unitz said:same to shaon0 <!-- Added by James for Benefactors: 11.30pm, 8 Feb 2005 -->
I'd still say it's quicker to just expand both sides and equate coefficientslyounamu said:Since it is devisible by (x-1) and (x-4), substituting x=1 or x=4 will yield P(x)=0
i.e. P(1) = (a . 1 + b)^2 - 1 = 0 ...(1)
And P(4) = (a . 4 +b)^2 -4 = 0...(2)
From the equation (1), a^2 + 2ab + b^2 - 1 = 0
(1) x 4: 4a ^2 + 8ab + 4b^2 - 4 = 0...(3)
From the equation (2), 16a^2 + 8ab + b^@ - 4 = 0
(2) - (3):12a^2 - 3b^2 = 0
4a^2 = b^2
b = 2a or b = -2a
Substitute 2a for the value of b in the equation (1)
i.e. a^2 + 2a . 2a + (2a)^2 - 1 = 0
a^2 + 4a^2 + 4a^2 - 1 = 0
9a^2 = 1
a^2 = 1/9
a = 1/3 or -1/3
Substitute -2a for the value of b in the equation (1)
i.e. a^2 + 2a . -2a + (2a)^2 - 1 = 0
a^2 - 4a^2 + 4a^2 - 1 = 0
a^2 - 1 =0
a = 1 or a=-1
When b =2a,
b = 2 . 1/3 = 2/3
Or b=2 . -1/3 = -2/3
When b = -2a,
b = -2 . 1 = -2
Or b = -2a = 2 . -1
= 2
However, a & b are integers so a = -1 and b = 2 or a =1 or b=-2
Yea equating out the coefficients is a little quicker....thats how i didn't do it.lolokay said:I'd still say it's quicker to just expand both sides and equate coefficients
edit: you can still do it by multiplying the (x-1)(x-4) by a^2, it just takes more time than solving simultaneously straight away3unitz said:i dont see how you can equate coefficients as its not equal to (x - 1)(x - 4) it's just divisible by both (x - 1) and (x - 4).
Not only is it equal to (x - 1)(x - 4) for some x, it is in fact identical to it. This is in fact quite an elementary result. It's what being [edit: exactly divisible] divisible by (x - 1) and (x - 4) means!3unitz said:i dont see how you can equate coefficients as its not equal to (x - 1)(x - 4) it's just divisible by both (x - 1) and (x - 4).
heres my solution, a little less messy:
P(x) = (ax + b)^2 - x
P(1) = 0 = (a + b)^2 - 1
0 = (a + b - 1) (a + b + 1)
a + b = 1 or a + b = -1
P(4) = 0 = (4a + b)^2 - 4
0 = (4a + b - 2) (4a + b + 2)
4a + b = 2 or 4a + b = -2
3a - 1 = 2
a = 1, b = -2
3a + 1 = -2
a = -1, b = 2