How do you find all the real and complex roots of F(x) = -9x^4 + 12x^3+40x^2-60x+25?

1 Answer
May 26, 2016

x_1 = 2/3+1/3i

x_2 = 2/3-1/3i

x_3 = sqrt(5)

x_4 = -sqrt(5)

Explanation:

Given:

f(x) = -9x^4+12x^3+40x^2-60x+25

By the rational root theorem, any rational zeros of f(x) will be expressible in the form p/q with integers p, q, with p a divisor of the constant term 25 and q a divisor of the coefficient -9 of the leading term.

That means that the only possible rational zeros of f(x) are:

+-1/9, +-1/3, +-5/9, +-1, +-5/3, +-25/9, +-5, +-25/3, +-25

None of these work, so f(x) has no rational zeros.

Take a deep breath and start trying a full blown quartic solution:

Multiply through by -9 to make the sums easier:

-9f(x) = 81x^4-108x^3+360x^2-540x+225

=(3x-1)^4-46(3x-1)^2+92(3x-1)-88

Let t=3x-1

We want to solve:

0 = t^4-46t^2+92t-88

=(t^2-at+b)(t^2+at+c)

=t^4+(b+c-a^2)t^2+a(b-c)t+bc

Equating coefficients and rearranging a little:

{ (b+c = a^2-46), (b-c = 92/a), (bc = -88) :}

Then:

(a^2-46)^2 = (b+c)^2 = (b-c)^2+4bc = (92/a)^2-352

Expanding both ends:

a^4-92a^2+2116 = 8464/a^2-352

Multiplying through by a^2 and rearranging a little, this becomes:

(a^2)^3-92(a^2)^2+2468(a^2)-8464 = 0

Let y=a^2

Let g(y) = y^3-92y^2+2468y-8464

By the rational root theorem, any rational zeros of g(y) are factors of 8464.

Trying the first few we find:

g(4) = 64-1472+9872-8464=0

So one solution is y = 4, that is a^2=4. So we can put a=2.

{ (b+c = a^2-46 = 2^2-46 = -42), (b-c = 92/a = 92/2 = 46), (bc = -88) :}

Hence:

b=2 and c=-44

So we have:

t^4-46t^2+92t-88 = (t^2-2t+2)(t^2+2t-44)

which has zeros:

t_1 = 1+i

t_2 = 1-i

t_3 = -1+3sqrt(5)

t_4 = -1-3sqrt(5)

Then x = (t+1)/3, hence zeros of the original quartic:

x_1 = 2/3+1/3i

x_2 = 2/3-1/3i

x_3 = sqrt(5)

x_4 = -sqrt(5)