The equation is -x2 - 4 = 14 or -x2 = 18 which is the same as x2 = -18. That is the quadratic equation.
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Because of how close the two are. The only difference between the two is that a complex number is any whole number along side of a fraction, while a real number is any positive number.
There are an infinite number of different quadratic equations. The quadratic formula is a single formula that can be used to find the pair of solutions to every quadratic equation.
The term inside the square root symbol is called the radicand. There isn't a specific term for it based on its sign; whether it's positive or negative, it's still the radicand.I'm a little confused by your reference to the quadratic equation.If the radicand is negative, the root is an imaginary number, though that doesn't specifically have anything to do with the quadratic equation in particular.If the quantity b2 - 4ac is negative in the quadratic equation, the root of the quadratic equation is either complex or imaginary depending on whether or not b is zero.---------------------------Thank you to whoever answered this first; you saved me a bit of trouble explaining this to the asker :)However, in the quadractic equation, the number under the radical is called the discriminant. This determines the number of solutions of the quadratic. If the radicand is negative, this means that there are no real solutions to the equation.
These are the real ROOTS of the quadratic equation when it equals zero. Example : x2- 7x + 10 = 0 can be written as (x - 5)(x - 2) = 0 Then x = 5 and x = 2 are the roots of this equation.
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The equation does not have a real number solution. Using the quadratic formula will give it's conjugate pair complex solution.
Because of how close the two are. The only difference between the two is that a complex number is any whole number along side of a fraction, while a real number is any positive number.
There are an infinite number of different quadratic equations. The quadratic formula is a single formula that can be used to find the pair of solutions to every quadratic equation.
Yes, if you have an equation az^2 + bz + c = 0 where a, b, and c are complex numbers, you can use the quadratic formula to find the (usually two) possible complex values for z. However, they will usually not be conjugates of each other.
The term inside the square root symbol is called the radicand. There isn't a specific term for it based on its sign; whether it's positive or negative, it's still the radicand.I'm a little confused by your reference to the quadratic equation.If the radicand is negative, the root is an imaginary number, though that doesn't specifically have anything to do with the quadratic equation in particular.If the quantity b2 - 4ac is negative in the quadratic equation, the root of the quadratic equation is either complex or imaginary depending on whether or not b is zero.---------------------------Thank you to whoever answered this first; you saved me a bit of trouble explaining this to the asker :)However, in the quadractic equation, the number under the radical is called the discriminant. This determines the number of solutions of the quadratic. If the radicand is negative, this means that there are no real solutions to the equation.
the maximum number of solutions to a quadratic equation is 2. However, usually there is only 1.
These are the real ROOTS of the quadratic equation when it equals zero. Example : x2- 7x + 10 = 0 can be written as (x - 5)(x - 2) = 0 Then x = 5 and x = 2 are the roots of this equation.
Plug 'a', 'b', and 'c' from the equation into the formula. When you do that, the formula becomes a pair of numbers ... one number when you pick the 'plus' sign, and another number when you pick the 'minus' sign. Those two numbers are the 'solutions' to the quadratic equation you started with.
0 real solutions. There are other solutions in the complex planes (with i, the imaginary number), but there are no real solutions.
It has no real roots.
The discriminant is -439 and so there are no real solutions.