It depends on what you wanted to do - graph it, solve it, factorise it, etc.
depending on your number's you plug them in differently.there is no real formula or equation for writing a polynomial.let's say you have the number; 8. & the variable; x(squared).you would get the polynomial: 8x(squared).you're pretty much just placing the number & variable together.hope that helped!(:
That would be -2 (x-2) x (x+3). Click on the Wolfram|Alpha link for all of your polynomial factorization needs.
squared as in square units and to the third power it would be cubed as in cubed units
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.
I'm not exactly sure what the equation is supposed to be, but it looks like there are no variables, x or y, that have a power, squared, cubed, etc., so the equation would be linear. As soon as you put a power into the equation it becomes nonlinear.
depending on your number's you plug them in differently.there is no real formula or equation for writing a polynomial.let's say you have the number; 8. & the variable; x(squared).you would get the polynomial: 8x(squared).you're pretty much just placing the number & variable together.hope that helped!(:
That would be -2 (x-2) x (x+3). Click on the Wolfram|Alpha link for all of your polynomial factorization needs.
Squared means 2 in exponents and cubed means 3 in exponents. For example, It saids 5 cubed, than it would be 5.3 .
squared as in square units and to the third power it would be cubed as in cubed units
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.
Since it's x2*x2, you would add the exponents giving you x4
I'm not exactly sure what the equation is supposed to be, but it looks like there are no variables, x or y, that have a power, squared, cubed, etc., so the equation would be linear. As soon as you put a power into the equation it becomes nonlinear.
You can factor this multivariate polynomial (a polynomial with several variables, here x and y), by looking at it as a univariate polynomial in either x or y. This would give you a simple second order equation of the form ax2+bx+c, which you can solve. This will give you 2 solutions, say x1 and x2, and can then factor your polynomial to a(x-x1)(x-x2). In our case: a=8, b=-y and c=-7y2 and the solutions for this equation are x1=y and x2=-7/8*y and this gives us 8x2 - xy -7y2 = 8(x-y)(x+7/8y) = (x-y)(8x+7y)
Squared means to the power 2. An wxample would be x2 = 25.
General formula for a circle is X squared + Y squared = radius squared. So the answer would be x squared + y squared = 2.64575131 squared
When writing a polynomial, the term with the highest power usually goes first: 2x2+2x The 2x squared goes first.
16. The way you do it is multiplying the number by its self. If it was four cubed you would do 4x4x4 or 64