Want this question answered?
graph apex xD
Do mean find the polynomial given its roots ? If so the answer is (x -r1)(x-r2)...(x-rn) where r1,r2,.. rn is the given list roots.
Basically the same way you graph most functions. You can calculate pairs of value - you express the polynomial as y = p(x), that is, the y-values are calculated on the basis of the x-values, you assign different values for "x", and calculate the corresponding values for "y". Then graph them. You can get more information about a polynomial if you know calculus. Calculus books sometimes have a chapter on graphing equations. For example: if you calculate the derivative of a polynomial and then calculate when this derivate is equal to zero, you will find the points at which the polynomial may have maximum or minimum values, and if you calculate the derivative at any point, you'll see whether the polynomial increases or decreases at that point (from left to right), depending on whether the derivative is positive or negative. Also, if you calculate when the second derivative is equal to zero, you'll find points at which the polynomial may change from convex to concave or vice-versa.
If the cubic polynomial you are given does not have an obvious factorization, then you must use synthetic division. I'm sure wikipedia can tell you all about that.
Bggvgvvguo
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a
a
graph!
Graph factor
graph apex xD
Do mean find the polynomial given its roots ? If so the answer is (x -r1)(x-r2)...(x-rn) where r1,r2,.. rn is the given list roots.
when the equation is equal to zero. . .:)
16a2b4
by synthetic division and quadratic equation
find the constant of variation and the slope of the given line from the graph of y=2.5x
Basically the same way you graph most functions. You can calculate pairs of value - you express the polynomial as y = p(x), that is, the y-values are calculated on the basis of the x-values, you assign different values for "x", and calculate the corresponding values for "y". Then graph them. You can get more information about a polynomial if you know calculus. Calculus books sometimes have a chapter on graphing equations. For example: if you calculate the derivative of a polynomial and then calculate when this derivate is equal to zero, you will find the points at which the polynomial may have maximum or minimum values, and if you calculate the derivative at any point, you'll see whether the polynomial increases or decreases at that point (from left to right), depending on whether the derivative is positive or negative. Also, if you calculate when the second derivative is equal to zero, you'll find points at which the polynomial may change from convex to concave or vice-versa.