The GCF of the coefficients and constants i 1. The GCF of the variables is also 1.
The GCF is 5x2
The GCF is 4x.
Factor as : (x+9)(x+10) using the first terms ( x terms) multiply to x2; the last terms multiply to 90; the sum of 9x + 10 x = 19x
The polynomial IS written in descending order.
x^4-x^3+x
4
4
3x
No. A polynomial is an expression of more than two algebraic terms, and usually contains different powers of the same variable.
The GCF is 4x4
Let's take a quadratic polynomial. There are three terms in a quadratic polynomial. Example: X^2 + 8X + 16 = 0 To satisfy the criteria of a perfect square polynomial, the first and last term of the polynomial must be squares. The middle term must be either plus or minus two multiplied by the square root of the first term multiplied by the square root of the last term. If these three criteria are satisifed, the polynomial is a perfect square. Let us take the above quadratic. X^2 + 8X + 16 = X^2 + 2(4X) + 4^2 = (X+4)^2 As we can see, each criteria is satified and the polynomial does indeed form a perfect square.
This polynomial doesn't factor. The only thing you can do is take out parts of some terms, e.g. 2(2x3 + 10x2 + x) - 3.
The common factor is 2.
4(x+8)
Yes, it is since it is a finite sum and the terms all have non-negative exponents.
A fifth degree polynomial.
5