How do you factor #27x^3-(1/8)#?

2 Answers
May 9, 2015

This is an example of the difference of cubes, in which #(a^3-b^3)=(a-b)(a^2+ab+b^2)# .

Factor #27x^3-1/8# .

#a=3x#
#b=1/2#

#(3x-1/2)((3x)^2+(3x)(1/2)+(1/2)^2)# =

#(3x-1/2)(9x^2+(3x)/2+1/4)#

May 9, 2015

Notice that #27#, #x^3# and #1/8# are all cubes. If you were allowed complex numbers as coefficients, then this could be completely factored as #(3x - 1/2)(3 omega x - 1/2)(3 omega ^2x - 1/2)#, where #omega# is the complex cube root of 1.

As it is, you are only interested in real numbers, not complex ones. So the only linear factor is #(3x - 1/2)#. The other factor is #(9x^2+(3/2)x+1/4)#.

Here are a couple of ways of finding that quadratic factor:

(1) Using complex arithmetic:
#(3 omega x - 1/2)(3 omega ^2x - 1/2) = 9 omega^3 x^2 - (3/2)(omega + omega^2)x + 1/4 = 9x^2 + (3/2)x + 1/4#
(since #omega^3 = 1# and #omega + omega^2 = -1#).

(2) Using real arithmetic, solve:
#27x^3 - 1/8 = (3x - 1/2)(ax^2 + bx + c)#
#= 3ax^3 + (3b - (1/2)a)x^2 + (3c - (1/2)b)x - (1/2)c#
Comparing coefficients, we get:
#3a = 27#
#(3b - (1/2)a) = 0#
#(3c - (1/2)b) = 0#
#(1/2)c = 1/8#
yielding #a = 9#, #b = 3/2# and #c = 1/4#.