No. Some have two solutions where as some have none.
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∙ 13y agoDraw the graph of the equation. the solution is/are the points where the line cuts the x(horisontal) axis .
Sum
When you graph the quadratic equation, you have three possibilities... 1. The graph touches x-axis once. Then that quadratic equation only has one solution and you find it by finding the x-intercept. 2. The graph touches x-axis twice. Then that quadratic equation has two solutions and you also find it by finding the x-intercept 3. The graph doesn't touch the x-axis at all. Then that quadratic equation has no solutions. If you really want to find the solutions, you'll have to go to imaginary solutions, where the solutions include negative square roots.
Whether or not that there is a solution to a quadratic equation,
The quadratic equation in standard form is: ax2 + bx + c = 0. The solution is x = [-b ± √b2- 4ac)] ÷ 2a You can use either plus or minus - a quadratic equation may have two solutions.
Draw the graph of the equation. the solution is/are the points where the line cuts the x(horisontal) axis .
Sum
x2
Is it possible for a quadratic equation to have no real solution? please give an example and explain. Thank you
If the discriminant of a quadratic equation is less than zero then it has no solutions.
Whether or not that there is a solution to a quadratic equation,
When you graph the quadratic equation, you have three possibilities... 1. The graph touches x-axis once. Then that quadratic equation only has one solution and you find it by finding the x-intercept. 2. The graph touches x-axis twice. Then that quadratic equation has two solutions and you also find it by finding the x-intercept 3. The graph doesn't touch the x-axis at all. Then that quadratic equation has no solutions. If you really want to find the solutions, you'll have to go to imaginary solutions, where the solutions include negative square roots.
It has one real solution.
1,2.5
The quadratic equation in standard form is: ax2 + bx + c = 0. The solution is x = [-b ± √b2- 4ac)] ÷ 2a You can use either plus or minus - a quadratic equation may have two solutions.
Using the quadratic equation formula: x = -5-/+ the square root of 7
If this is a quadratic equation, you did not specify the third term adequately.