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Unit 5 – Polynomial Functions DAY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 TOPIC -Vocabulary for Polynomials -Add/Subtract Polynomials -Identifying Number of Real Zeros for a graph from calculator Multiplying Polynomials ASSIGNMENT 6.1 # 1-18 Long Division of Polynomials (begin synthetic division) -Synthetic Division and Synthetic Substitution -Remainder Theorem -Synthetic Division and Synthetic Substitution -Remainder Theorem REVIEW QUIZ (50 points) Factor Theorem Factoring Higher Degree Polynomials Sum/Diff of Two Cubes Grouping More on 6.4 6.3 # 3, 4, 13, 15, 16 6.3 # 20-22, 24-26, 31, 32, 49 Worksheet (p.11 in packet) TO BE ANNOUNCED 13 14 Rational Roots Theorem Solving Polynomial Equations by Factoring Multiplicity of Roots Rational Roots Theorem and Solving Polynomial Equations with the help of a calculator -Writing Functions Given Zeros -Fundamental Theorem of Algebra -Irrational and Complex Conjugate Roots Theorems More on 6.6 REVIEW 15 TEST-entire unit 10 11 12 6.2 # 1-8, 10, 18-25 6.4 # 17-23, 34, 35, 50 6.4 26 – 30(skip 27), 33, 34, 36 6.5 # 2-4, 11-13 6.5 # 24-26 (Use RRT), 27-29 6.6 # 1, 2, 15, 16, 18 6.6 # 7, 8, 20, 21 P 474 # 2-54 (even – this might change) TBA Note: Due to Winter Break we will finish up to Day 11 or 12. On Day 12 we will have a short quiz. We will not have a test on this unit. Days 11 and 12 will be handled when we return from break. Page 1 of 28 sU5 Day 1 Polynomial Functions (Section 6.1) An expression that is a real number, a variable, or a product of a real number and a variable with whole-number exponents _______________________________ A _______________________ is a monomial or the sum of monomials. Standard form is written in descending order of exponents. The exponent of the variable in a term is the ______________________ constant P( x) 2 x 3 5 x 2 2 x 5 Leading coefficient cubic term quadratic term linear term Facts about polynomials: 1. classify by the number of terms it contains 2. A polynomial of more than three terms does not usually have a special name 3. Polynomials can also be classified by degree. 4. the degree of a polynomial is: ____________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ Degree Name using degree Polynomial example Alternate Example 0 -9 11 1 x-4 4x 2 x 2 3x 1 x2 1 3 x3 3x2 10x 7 x3 10x 4 Quartic 5 quintic Page 2 of 28 Number of Terms Monomial/monomial Trinomial/binomial Practice 1. Write each polynomial in standard form. Then classify it by degree and by the number of terms. a. 7 x 5 x 4 b. x 2 4 x 3x3 2 x d. 3x3 x 2 4 x 2 x3 c. 4x 6x 5 2. ADDING and SUBTRACTING Polynomials. Write your answer in standard form. a.) ( x 4 x 3x 2 x) (10 x 4 x 9 x ) 2 3 2 3 b.) (3 2 x2 ) ( x2 6 x) 3. Graph each polynomial function on a calculator. Read the graph from left to right and describe when it increases or decreases. Determine the number of x-intercepts. Sketch the graph. a.) f ( x) x x b.) f ( x) 3x 2 x 1 3 3 XMIN = -5 XMAX = 5 YMIN = -5 YMAX = 5 Description: from left to right the graph increases, decreases slightly, and increases again. There are 3 x-intercepts = 3 REAL ZEROS. c.) f ( x) x 8 x 1 4 XMIN = -5 XMAX Page =3 5 of 28 YMIN = -15 YMAX = 10 2 Description: d.) f ( x) 1 4 x 2 x3 2 6 XMIN = -5 XMAX = 5 YMIN = -5 YMAX = 5 Description: Description: Closure: Describe in words how to determine the degree of a polynomial. U5 Day 2 Multiplying Polynomials (Section 6.2) WARM UP 1-2 Evaluate 3-4 Simplify 1. 2 4 2. (2) 4 5.) x 3 x8 6.) x 2 3x 3 WARM UP Part 2 Multiply Multiplying Polynomials Page 4 of 28 3.) x – 2(3x-1) 4.) 3( y 2 6 y) Distribute the x and then distribute the 2. Combine like terms and simplify. Try These If you are interested in using the Alternate Method (see example below), I set up the first one for you. a.) (a 3)(2 5a a ) b.) ( y 7 y 5)( y y 3) 2 2 -5a 2 2 a2 a -3 6-2 Alternate Method – Table Multiplying Polynomials Example 2B: Multiplying Polynomials Find the product. (y2 – 7y + 5)(y2 – y – 3) Multiply each term of one polynomial by each term of the other. Use a table to organize the products. y2 –y –3 The top left corner is the first y2 y4 –y3 –3y2 term in the product. Combine terms along diagonals to get –7y –7y3 7y2 21y the middle terms. The bottom right corner is the last term in 5 5y2 –5y –15 the product. y4 + (–7y3 – y3 ) + (5y2 + 7y2 – 3y2) + (–5y + 21y) – 15 y4 – 8y3 + 9y2 + 16y – 15 Holt Algebra 2 Page 5 of 28 U5 Day 3 Long Division Polynomials (Section 6.3) Review Days 1 and 2 Classify the each polynomial by degree and number of terms. 1. x3 5x2 70 2. x4 11x3 7 x2 x Perform the indicated operation. 3. (8x 5x 2 ) ( x 2 6 8x) 4. ( y 5)( y y 3) 5. 5 xy(10 y 3xy 5 x y) 6. (x – 1) (x – 2) (x + 3) 3 Page 6 of 28 2 2 Just for fun try the following long division without your calculator (OH NOOOO!! Please don’t make me think – it’s almost winter break). 3169/15 = Let’s do one together: ( y 2 2 y3 25) /(y-3) The Setup: Write the dividend (the part on the inside) in standard form, including any terms with a coefficient of 0. 2 y3 y 2 0 y 25 Setup a long division problem the same way you would when dividing numbers. y – 3 2y3 – y2 + 0y + 25 Practice 1 5. (3x 2 9 x 2) / ( x ) 3 Page 7 of 28 6. U5 Day 4 Synthetic Division (Section 6.3 cont.) Synthetic division is a shorthand method of dividing a polynomial by a linear binomial by using only the _______________. For synthetic division to work, the polynomial must be written in standard form, using 0 and a coefficient for any missing terms, and the divisor must be in the form (x – a). In long division we divide and subtract, in synthetic division we ____________ and ____________. Let’s Try These Together Page 8 of 28 Synthetic Substitution – using synthetic division to evaluate polynomials. Use the Remainder Theorem. Example: P(x) = x3 4x2 3x 5 for x = 4 Try These U5 Day 5 (Section 6.3 cont.) Use this time to complete any skipped problems for days 1-4. Ready to Go On? Page 9 of 28 6-3 Lesson Practice Quiz 1. Divide by using long division. ( 8x 3 6x 2 7 ) ÷ (x + 2) 2. Divide by using synthetic division. ( x 3 3x 5) ÷ (x + 2) 3. Use synthetic substitution to evaluate P(x) = ( x 3 3x 2 6) for x = 5 and x = –1. Page 10 of 28 4. Find an expression for the height of a parallelogram whose area is represented by (2 x 3 x 2 20 x 3) and whose base is represented by (x + 3). If time allows start on homework U5 Day 5 Homework Worksheet – show all work U5 Day 6 Quiz Review Show all work-be organized-write answers on the lines provided. I. Perform the indicated operation. Write the answer in standard form. 1. (2 x 4 4 x 2 6 x 5 x3 1) (2 x 9 x 4 8 x3 1x 2 7) ___________________________________ 2. (1x 2 x 4 3x3 4) (9 x 4 8x 2 4 x 2 x3 3) ___________________________________ 2a) The degree of your answer to #2 is_________ 2b) The leading coefficient in your answer is_______ Page 11 of 28 Multiply: 3. ( x 2 2 x 4)( x 1) 4. ( x 2 x 1)( x 2 x 1) ______________________________ 5. ( x 2 4 x 1)(2 x 2 3) ____________________________ 6. Expand ( x 3)3 _______________________________ __________________________________ III. Divide using LONG division: Write the quotient, with the remainder, if there is one, as a fraction, on the answer line. 7. (3x3 4 x 2 7 x) ( x 3) 8. ( x3 3x 2 2 x 4) ( x 1) ____________________________ __________________________ 4 2 9. Divide using SYNTHETIC division: ( x 3x 4 x 3) ( x 2) . Write the quotient, with the remainder, if there is one, as a fraction. ______________________________ 10. If f ( x) x5 10 x3 3x 2 3x 9 , find f (4) using synthetic division. f (4) ______ 11. Is ( x 1) a factor of f ( x) x 5x 2 x 1x 2 ? Explain how you know. Show work. 4 Page 12 of 28 3 2 Fill in the blanks for the chart below. Example of a function Degree of the function 4 3 f ( x) x 5 x 2 Name/type of function f ( x) x 5 f ( x) x 3 f ( x) 7 f ( x) 2 x 3 f ( x) 9 x 2 Complete each statement below. A polynomial with 2 terms is called a ________________The degree of 3x3 y 2 z 5 is____________. U5 Day 8 Factoring (Section 6.4) Warm Up Factor each expression a.) 3x – 18y b.) a 2 b 2 Use the distributive property a.) (x – 10) (2x + 7) c.) x3 2 x 2 15 x b.) (a 2 1)(a 2) The Remainder Theorem: if a polynomial is divided by (x – a), the remainder is the value of the function at a. So, if (x – a) is a factor of P(x), then P(a) = 0. Determine Whether a Linear Binomial is a Factor Example1: Is (x-3) a factor of P(x) = x 2 2 x 3 . Page 13 of 28 Example 2: Is (x + 4) a factor of P(x) = 2 x 4 8 x3 2 x 8 You Try a.) Is (x+2) a factor of P(x) = 4 x 2 2 x 5 . b.) Is (3x - 6) a factor of P(x) = 3x 4 6 x3 6 x 2 3x 30 . Note: the binomial is not in the form (x – a) Factor by Grouping Common binomial factor – Write as two binomials in simplified form a.) 2y(5x + 12) + 7(5x + 12) b. x ( x 3) 4( x 3) 2 c.) 3a (4b 1) 9b(1 4b) 4 Exampe1: You Try a.) x 2 x x 2 3 2 b.) c.) x3 2 x 2 9 x 18 Graphing Calculator Table Feature (compare original equation and factored form) Page 14 of 28 Use the Table feature on your calculator to check problems a and b from above (You Try Section) 3 2 a.) x 2 x x 2 Which values of Y1 and Y2 are 0?____________ b.) Which values of Y1 and Y2 are 0?____________ Closure 1. If (x – 3) is a factor of some polynomial P(x) what does that tell you about the remainder? 2. If you divide 5 into 80 what is your remainder? What does this tell you about the number 5 with regard to the number 20? U5 Day 9 Factoring continued… Warm Up 1.) ( x 2)( x 2 2 x 4) Example 1: a = ________ 2.) (5 y 2)(25 y 2 10 y 4) 8 y3 27 (Identify a and b) b = ________ Example 3: Page 15 of 28 Example 2: a = ________ b = ________ 8 z6 a = ________ b = ________ 5x4 40 x You Try a.) 2 x4 56 x b.) 64 x3 1 d.) 250 x4 54 x e.) Challenge c.) 3x4 24 x 64 x6 1 Application Closure 1.) Describe one key difference between factoring the SUM of perfect squares VS the DIFFERENCE of perfect squares. Page 16 of 28 U5 Day 10 Real Roots in Polynomial Equations (Section 6.5) From section 5-3 the Zero _________ Property defines how we can find the roots (or solutions) of the polynomial equation P(x) = 0 by setting each __________ equal to 0. Factor Example 1: (Factor out the GCF) Let’s look at the graph. Use a simple substitution here. I’ll show you. Example 2: You Try a.) 2 x6 10 x5 12 x4 0 b.) x3 2 x2 25x 50 Multiplicity Calculator Exploration Multiplicity simply means that a factor is repeated in a polynomial function. By Definition: The multiplicity of root r is the number of times that x – r is a ___________ of P(x). 1. What is the multiplicity in the following: M = _____ What does the graph do if M is EVEN? Compare this to y = ( x 1) M = ______ 4 SKETCH THE FUNCTIONS Page 17 of 28 y = ( x 1) ? 2 2. . What is the multiplicity in the following: M = _____ y = ( x 1) ? 3 What does the graph do if M is ODD? Compare this to y = ( x 1) M = ______ 5 SKETCH THE FUNCTIONS 3. What is the multiplicity in the following: y = ( x 1) ( x 4) 3 2 There are two values for M. Let’s see what happens. Do you have a prediction? SKETCH THE FUNCTION 4. Find the roots and the multiplicity of each root for y = (2x - 10)(x – 7)(x + 1)(x+1) 5. Identify the roots and state the multiplicity for each root: (Use your calculator.) a.) f(x) = ( x 2)( x 5)( x 1)2 b.) 2 x6 22 x5 48x4 72x3 Closure: How is a real root with odd multiplicity different from a real root with even multiplicity? Explain (yes in words). U5 Day 11 Rational Root Theorem (Section 6.5 cont.) Warm Up Page 18 of 28 Example: Step 3 Test on the possible rational roots. Look at the graph, which one seems possible. Use Division and the Remainder Theorem to test. Step 4 List all factors. Step 5 Find all roots. Set each factor = 0. Sometimes you’ll need the quadratic formula. (Ignore the numbering.) Follow the directions. Just practice listing the possible roots. Page 19 of 28 Show all work 1. Let f ( x) 2x 4 7 x3 5x 2 28x 12 . a. List all the possible rational roots. (p/q’s) b. Use a calculator to help determine which values are the roots and perform synthetic division with those roots. c. Write the polynomial in factored form and determine the zeros of the function. List the multiplicity of each zero. (You will need to use the quadratic formula.) 2. Let g ( x) x3 5x 2 23x 8 . a. List all the possible rational roots. (p/q’s) b. Use a calculator to help determine which values are the roots and perform synthetic division with those roots. c. Write the polynomial in factored form and determine the zeros of the function. List the multiplicity of each zero. Page 20 of 28 U6 Day 12 Fundamental Theorem of Algebra (Section 6.6) Warm up – Identify real roots (hints: set = 0; factor or graph on TI) 5 4 1. 4x – 8x – 32x3 = 0 3 2 2. x –x + 9 = 9x 4 2 3. x + 16 = 17x 3 2 4. 3x + 75x = 30x Example 1: Writing Polynomial Functions Write the simplest polynomial with roots -2, 2 and 4 Step 1 - Write the binomial factors: Step 2 – Multiply the binomial factors: You Try - Write the simplest polynomial with roots: a) 0, 3, 2/3 (yes that last one is a fraction) b) -2, 4, 2/3 Page 21 of 28 Notice that the degree of the function in Example 1 is the same as the number of _______. This is true for all polynomial functions. However, all of the zeros are not necessarily ______ zeros. Polynomials functions may have complex zeros that are not ______ numbers. Fundamental Theorem of Algebra Every Polynomial function of degree n 1 has at least ________ __________, where a zero may be a complex number. Corollary Every Polynomial function of degree n 1 has exactly ____ zeros, including multiplicities. Example 2: Finding all Roots of a Polynomial Equation Solve x4 – 3x3 + 5x2 – 27x – 36 = 0 by finding all roots. The degree of the polynomial:____________________ The number of roots of the polynomial:____________ Use the Rational Root Theorem to find the POSSIBLE ROOTS. p = _______ q = _______ List ALL possible roots:___________________ There are too many POSSIBLE roots to check. Use the graph. Looks like x = -1 might be a root. Test it. How? Be Careful, if the root is x = -1, what is the binomial we are dividing by?___________ How will you know if -1 is a root? -1| 1 -3 5 -27 -36 Ok, we have one root. Find another. Let’s complete Example 2 together… Page 22 of 28 Be sure to differentiate between factors and roots/solutions. List the FACTORS for the Example 2 polynomial__________________________ List the ROOTS/SOLUTIONS for the Example 2 polynomial________________ You Try Solve x 4 4 x3 x 2 16 x 20 0 by finding ALL roots. Page 23 of 28 Show work below. U6 Day 13 Fundamental Theorem of Algebra (Section 6.6 cont…) This first theorem is actually from 6.5 but we’ll do it here. Think about this by solving for x in the following: x 2 5 0 Find the conjugate of the following: a.) 7 2 b.) 11 c.) 1 6 d.) 3 Note: Real Numbers are a subset of the complex numbers (a + bi) where b is zero so the real number 10 could be represented as 10 + 0i. In the following theorem the term complex root will only refer to a + bi where b is not 0. Complex Conjugate Root Theorem If a + bi is a root of a polynomial equation with real number coefficients then _________ is also a root. Write the simplest polynomial function with the given zeros: a.) 1 + 2i b.) 2 c.) 1 + 2i, 2 (Return to the previous page Page 24 of 28 and do 3, 4 and 6.) Chapter 6 Test Review 1. Simplify the expression. a) 3x6 (4 x5 7 x) 2. Use synthetic division to show that ( x 2) is NOT a factor of (3x3 4 x 2 7 x 4) . Remember—if the factor is x – 2, use 2 for the synthetic division. 3. Given that P( x) 2 x3 3x 2 8 , find P (2) . Solve these polynomial equations by factoring. 4. x3 2 x 2 8 x 0 5 x3 5 x 2 4 x 20 0 6. 2 x5 12 x 4 18 x3 0 Page 25 of 28 b) (2 x3 x 2 )( x3 6 x 2 ) 7. Write a polynomial equation with the following roots: 2, 4, 1 (answer in standard form—multiplied out) 8. Write a polynomial equation with the following roots: 0, 3i (leave in factored form) 9. For f ( x) x 4 ( x 5)( x 3)2 ( x 5)3 , state the roots and their multiplicities. If you multiplied the function out into standard form (don’t actually do it, unless you’re super bored), what would be the degree of the function? 10. How many roots (counting multiplicities) does f ( x) 6 x7 10 x 4 3x3 9 x 4 have? 11. There is a 4th degree polynomial that has roots 4 9 5 and 7 i . What are the other 2 roots? (#12 – 13) Find all the roots of the function. Use your calculator (and the rational root theorem) to find a root that will work with synthetic division. Once you get the function down to a quadratic, you can use factoring or the quadratic formula. 12. f ( x) x3 2 x 2 3x 6 13. f ( x) x3 19 x 30 Page 26 of 28 Page 27 of 28 Some answers: 1a) 12 x11 21x 7 1b) 2 x 6 11x5 6 x 4 3. 4 4. 0, 2, -4 5. 2, -2, -5 6. 0, 3 7. x3 3x 2 6 x 8 8. x( x 3i )( x 3i ) x3 9 x 9. 0 w/ mult. of 4, 5 w/ mult of 1, -3 w/ mult of 2, -5 w/ mult of 3. degree = 10 10. 7 11. 4 9 5, 7 i 12. 2, 3 13. 5, -2, -3 28