Using the factor theorem, what are the rational zeroes of the function #f(x) = x^4 +2x^3 - 13x^2 -38x- 24 =0#?

1 Answer
Jan 2, 2018

#-3;-2;-1;4#

Explanation:

We would find the rational zeroes in the factors of the known term (24), divided by the factors of the maximum degree coefficient (1):
#+-1;+-2;+-3;+-4;+-6;+-8;+-12;+-24#

Let's calculate:

f(1); f(-1);f(2);...f(-24)

we will get 0 to 4 zeroes, that's the degree of the polynomial f(x):

#f(1)=1+2-13-38-24!=0#,

then 1 isn't a zero;

#f(-1)=1-2-13+38-24=0#

then #color(red)(-1)# is a zero!

As we find a zero, we would apply the division:

#(x^4+2x^3-13x^2-38x-24)-:(x+1)#

and get remainder 0 and quotient:

#q(x)=x^3+x^2-14x-24#

and we would repeat the processing as at the beginning (with the same factors excluding 1 because it isn't a zero!)

#q(-1)=-1+1+14-24!=0#
#q(2)=8+4+28-24!=0#

#q(-2)=-8+4+28-24=0->color(red)(-2)# is a zero!
Let's divide:

#(x^3+x^2-14x-24)-:(x+2)#

and get quotient:

#x^2-x-12#

whose zeroes are #color(red)(-3)# and #color(red)(4)#