That doesn't factor neatly. Applying the quadratic equation, we find two imaginary solutions: (8 plus or minus 4i) divided by 5
x = 1.6 + 0.8i
x = 1.6 - 0.8i
where i is the square root of negative one.
4d2+16 4(d2+4)
(g - 16)(g - 16) or (g - 16)2
(3a - 4)(3a - 4)
The greatest common factor is 16: 32 X 5 = 16 X 10; 64 X 4 = 16 X 16; and 16 = 16 X 1. Even though the two numbers could be further reduced, the term with "x" would then be fractional; therefore, 16 is the greatest common factor.
No, 16 is a multiple of 4. 4 is a factor of 16.
4x + 16 + 1 = 4x + 17 which cannot be factorised.
-((x + 2)(x - 8))
4d2+16 4(d2+4)
(g - 16)(g - 16) or (g - 16)2
x^2 + 10x + 16 = (x + 8)(x + 2)
(3x + 4)(3x + 4)
4(x + 2)(x + 2)
4(y + 2)(y + 2)
x + 4
4(3y+4)
4(y + 2)(y + 2)
(b + 4)(b + 4)