Quadratic Equation B4

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Source: algebrica.org - CC BY-NC 4.0 https://algebrica.org/exercises/quadratic-equation-b-4/ Fetched from algebrica.org test 4589; source modified 2025-03-06T18:04:55.

Solve the quadratic equations using the factorization method.

x^2-5x-14 = 0

The equations is in the standard form $ax^2+bx+c=0$. First, it is essential to verify the its discriminant $\Delta = b^2 - 4ac$ is $\geq0 \quad$ to ensure the equation admits solutions in the field of real numbers. Substituting the coefficients of the equation into $\Delta$, we get:

\Delta = (-5)^2-4(1)(-14) = 25 + 56 = 81 \gt 0

$\Delta \gt 0$ means the equation has real solutions.


Now, we need to factorize the polynomial. We must find two numbers, $r_1, r_2$ whose sum $S = r_1 + r_2$ equals $b = -5$ and whose product $P = r_1 \cdot r_2$ equals $a \cdot c = 1 \cdot -14 = -14$. We can use this simple table to find the numbers that satisfy our constraints.

\begin{array}{rrrr} & r_1 & r_2 & P & S \\\\ \hline & 2 & - 7 & -14 & -5 \\\\ & -2 & 7 & -14 & 5\\\\ \end{array}

The numbers $r_1, r_2$ satisfying the constraint are 2 and -7 (row 1). Then we need to rewrite the polynomial as $ax^2 + r_{1}x + r_{2}x + c$. The equation becomes:

x^2+2x-7x-14 = 0

The equation becomes:

3x^2 -9x + 5x-15 = 0

Factoring common terms, we get:

\begin{align*} x(x+2)-7(x+2) &= 0 \\[0.6em] (x+2)(x-7) & = 0 \end{align*}

The solutions are the values of $x$ for which $x+2 = 0$ and $x-7 = 0$.

x+2 = 0 \to x=-2
x-7 = 0 \to x=7

The solution to the equation is:

x_1=-2, \\ x_2=7

Remember that the discriminant is crucial in determining the nature and number of solutions of quadratic equations.

  • If $b^2 - 4ac > 0$, the quadratic equation has two distinct real solutions.
S = \{x_1, x_2\} \quad x_1, x_2 \in \mathbb{R} \quad x_1 \neq x_2
  • If $b^2 - 4ac = 0$, the quadratic equation has two coincident real solutions.
S = \{x\} \quad x \in \mathbb{R} \quad x = x_1 = x_2
  • If $b^2 - 4ac = < 0$, the quadratic equation has no real solutions. Instead, it gives rise to complex solutions characterized by imaginary components.
\nexists \hspace{10px} x \in \mathbb{R}