How do you find the value of the discriminant and determine the nature of the roots #-4m^2-4m+5#?
4 Answers
Explanation:
In a quadratic function written in the form
the discriminant, also called delta is known as follow:
In the case of
Then using the formula for the discriminant...
So
When they ask about the 'nature of the roots' they what this basically means is, how many are there? You can know this from the descriminant.
When
When
When
(As for why they're called 'real' roots, you don't need to worry about that now)
So in this case, when
Discriminant:
implying
Explanation:
Given a quadratic of the form:
the discriminant is
with
For the given example:
we have
So this expression has
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note:
The most common problem with this type of question is that we are typically accustomed to seeing this with
but the variable can be any letter (in this case it happens to be
Explanation:
#Delta=b^2-4aclarrcolor(blue)" discriminant"#
#• " if "Delta>0" then 2 real irrational roots"#
#• " if "Delta>0" and a perfect square"#
#"then 2 real rational roots"#
#• " if "Delta=0" then real rational equal roots"#
#• " if "Delta<0" then 2 complex conjugate roots"#
#-4m^2-4m+5#
#"with "a=-4,b=-4,c=5#
#Delta=b^2-4ac=16+80=96#
#rArr"2 real and irrational roots"#
#color(blue)"As a check"#
#"solve for m using the "color(blue)"quadratic formula"#
#m=(4+-sqrt96)/(-8)=(4+-4sqrt6)/(-8)#
#rArrm=-1/2+-1/2sqrt6larr" 2 real irrational roots"#
Two real solutions ,
Explanation:
equation
Discriminant
If discriminant is positive, we get two real solutions, if it is zero we
get just one solution, and if it is negative we get complex solutions.
Here discriminant is positive, so we get two real solutions.