If either factor is zero, so is the polynomial. The first factor is zero when x = 3 and the second factor when x = 4. Thus the required values of x are 3 and 4.
4 and 5 -4 and -8
0
A polynomial expression is one with a degree higher than 0. Hence, all constants will meet your criterion. Note that (x+2) or [sin(2x)+4] is a polynomial of degree 1. The following is a trivial (normally ignored; inconsequential) non-polynomial: (5x2 - 2x2 - 3x2 + 2) ======================================
0
Upto 4. If the coefficients are all real, then it can have only 0, 2 or 4 real roots.
2 or 5
The values that make each of the factors zero. In other words, you need to solve:x - 2 = 0 and: x - 5 = 0
4 and 5 -4 and -8
-2 and -6
2 and 7.
-6 Check: -6+4-6+8 = 0
If (x + 3)(x +7) = 0 then either: x + 3 = 0 or x + 7 = 7 Hence x = -3 or -7.
If a polynomial has factors x-6 and x-3 it will equal 0 if either factor equals 0 since the other factor then would be multiplied by 0. ie. 0 * (x-6)=0 and 0 * (x-3)=0. so x=3 or 6
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
Not quite. The polynomial's linear factors are related - not equal to - the places where the graph meets the x-axis. For example, the polynomial x2 - 5x + 6, in factored form, is (x - 2) (x - 3). In this case, +2 and +3 are "zeroes" of the polynomial, i.e., the graph crosses the x-axis. That is, in an x-y graph, y = 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.
With difficulty. Plot a graph of the polynomial and see where it crosses the x axis. If it does, then y=0 at that point, and (x-a) is a factor. Sometimes you might spot where the polynomial is zero just by trying various values.