Any multiple of X^2+X/2-1/2
I am not really sure what you are asking for, but any intercept on the x-axis has a y value of 0, so for any particular x value N, the intercept is at (N, 0).
1,000,000,000,000,000
5 (12,00,000)
In English-speeking countries, that would usually be a 1, followed by 12 zeros. In some other countries it's a 1, followed by 18 zeros.
Either graph the polynomial on graph paper manually or on a graphing calculator. If it is a "y=" polynomial, then the zeroes are the points or point where the polynomial touches the x-axis. If it is an "x=" polynomial, then the zeroes are the points or point where the polynomial touches the y-axis. If it touches neither, then it has no zeroes.
The zeros of a quadratic function, if they exist, are the values of the variable at which the graph crosses the horizontal axis.
They tell you where the graph of the polynomial crosses the x-axis.Now, taking the derivative of the polynomial and setting that answer to zero tells you where the localized maximum and minimum values occur. Two values that have vast applications in almost any profession that uses statistics.
the zeros of a function is/are the values of the variables in the function that makes/make the function zero. for example: In f(x) = x2 -7x + 10, the zeros of the function are 2 and 5 because these will make the function zero.
Yes, the places where the graph of a polynomial intercepts the x-axis are zeros. The value of y at those places must be 0 for the polynomial to intersect the x axis.
The integral zeros of a function are integers for which the value of the function is zero, or where the graph of the function crosses the horizontal axis.
by synthetic division and quadratic equation
In the real domain, yes. In the complex domain, no.
Find All Possible Roots/Zeros Using the Rational Roots Test f(x)=x^4-81 ... If a polynomial function has integer coefficients, then every rational zero will ...
no a plynomial can not have more zeros than the highest (degree) number of the function at leas that is what i was taught. double check the math.
A quadratic polynomial must have zeros, though they may be complex numbers.A quadratic polynomial with no real zeros is one whose discriminant b2-4ac is negative. Such a polynomial has no special name.
The integral zeros of a function are integers for which the value of the function is zero, or where the graph of the function crosses the horizontal axis.