A polynomial of degree 0 is a polynomial without any variables, such as 9.
Yes! Also, 0 is a polynomial.
Not in the normal sense but it could be considered a degenerate polynomial of degree 0.
The smallest is 0: the polynomial p(x) = 3, for example.
is -4 a polynomial? This depends on what you accept as a definition A polynomial is often defined as a set of things in order obeying certain rules. ( these things and rules can be very complicated) A polynomial EQUATION is an equation between two polynomials When using only real numbers and "regular" math rules -4 is a polymomial of degree 0 x = -4 is a polynomial equation is a polynomial of degree 1 it is the same as x +4 = 0 It can be represented by { 4, 0} Sometimes the terms are used interchangably
A polynomial of degree 0 is a polynomial without any variables, such as 9.
zero polynomial which is 0 and only 0 = 0.
Yes! Also, 0 is a polynomial.
a constant polynomial has a degree zero (0).
The "roots" of a polynomial are the solutions of the equation polynomial = 0. That is, any value which you can replace for "x", to make the polynomial equal to zero.
Not in the normal sense but it could be considered a degenerate polynomial of degree 0.
The smallest is 0: the polynomial p(x) = 3, for example.
The graph of a polynomial in X crosses the X-axis at x-intercepts known as the roots of the polynomial, the values of x that solve the equation.(polynomial in X) = 0 or otherwise y=0
It is: 0
Yes, f(x) = 2 is a polynomial of degree 0 (because there are no x terms).
The polynomial equation is x2 - x - 1 = 0.
2 or 5