No. Sometimes they are both extraneous.
No, it is not.
That depends on the equation.
You know an equation is quadratic by looking at the degree of the highest power in the equation. If it is 2, then it is quadratic. so any equation or polynomial of the form: ax2 +bx+c=0 where a is NOT 0 and a, b and c are known as the quadratic coefficients is a quadratic equation.
A quadratic equation.
An "extraneous solution" is not a characteristic of an equation, but has to do with the methods used to solve it. Typically, if you square both sides of the equation, and solve the resulting equation, you might get additional solutions that are not part of the original equation. Just do this, and check each of the solutions, whether it satisfies the original equation. If one of them doesn't, it is an "extraneous" solution introduced by the squaring.
If the discriminant of a quadratic equation is less then 0 then it will have no real solutions.
Quadratic equation
The graph of a quadratic equation is called a parabola.The graph of a quadratic equation is called a parabola.The graph of a quadratic equation is called a parabola.The graph of a quadratic equation is called a parabola.
In problems of motion, especially involving constant acceleration, a quadratic equation will from the formulas of motion to solve for time, usually. This is just one example.
the graph for a quadratic equation ct5r
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF QUADRATIC EQUATION1) complete quadratic equation2) incomplete quadratic equation
That depends on the equation.
You know an equation is quadratic by looking at the degree of the highest power in the equation. If it is 2, then it is quadratic. so any equation or polynomial of the form: ax2 +bx+c=0 where a is NOT 0 and a, b and c are known as the quadratic coefficients is a quadratic equation.
The quadratic formula is used to solve the quadratic equation. Many equations in which the variable is squared can be written as a quadratic equation, and then solved with the quadratic formula.
It is still called a quadratic equation!
A quadratic equation.
No. [ y = 4x2 ] is a quadratic equation.
The graph (on Cartesian coordinates) of a quadratic equation is a parabola.