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FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM OF ALGEBRA AND FINDING REAL ROOTS Honors Advanced Algebra Presentation 2-6 WARM-UP 1. Given the roots, write the factors of the quadratic and the polynomial. x = -3, 2 2. x = 4, 3 3. x = -5, 5 4. x = 1, 1 ROOTS OF A POLYNOMIAL The places where a polynomial crosses or touches the x-axis are called the roots of the polynomial. They are also known as x-intercepts, zeros, or solutions. Roots can be found by setting the polynomial equal to 0 and solving. THE FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM OF ALGEBRA Every polynomial function of degree 𝑛 ≥ 1 has at least one zero, where a zero may be a complex number. Corollary: Every polynomials function of degree 𝑛 ≥ 1 has exactly n zeros, including multiplicities and irrational roots. MULTIPLICITY OF A ROOT A root can occur once or multiple times. If the root repeats, the number of times is known as the multiplicity of a root. If the multiplicity is even, the graph will touch the x-axis but not cross it; if the multiplicity is odd, the graph will intersect the x-axis. Example: Write a polynomial with roots 1 with a multiplicity of 2 and -3 with a multiplicity of 1. MULTIPLICITY OF A ROOT Multiplicity of 1 Multiplicity of 2 Multiplicity of 3 MULTIPLICITY OF A ROOT Example 2: Write a possible polynomial as the product of factors given the graph below. RATIONAL ROOTS THEOREM If the polynomial P(x) has integer coefficients, then every rational root of the polynomial equation P(x) = 0 can be 𝑝 written in the form , where p is a 𝑞 factor of the constant term of P(x) and q is a factor of the leading coefficient of P(x). RATIONAL ROOTS THEOREM Example: Find all possible rational roots of 𝑃 𝑥 = 4𝑥 4 − 21𝑥 3 + 18𝑥 2 + 19𝑥 − 6 RATIONAL ROOTS THEOREM Example: Use the rational roots theorem and a graph to completely factor 𝑃 𝑥 = 4𝑥 4 − 21𝑥 3 + 18𝑥 2 + 19𝑥 − 6 IRRATIONAL ROOTS THEOREM If the polynomial P(x) has rational coefficients and 𝑎 + 𝑏 𝑐 is a root of the polynomial equation P(x) = 0, where a and b are rational and 𝑐 is irrational, then 𝑎 − 𝑏 𝑐 is also a root of P(x) = 0. IRRATIONAL ROOTS THEOREM Irrational roots always come in conjugate pairs. Example: If 5 − 2 3 is a root of a polynomial, what is another root of the polynomial? What is the corresponding factor? COMPLEX CONJUGATE ROOT THEOREM If a + bi is a root of a polynomial equation with real-number coefficients, then a – bi is also a root. Imaginary roots always come in conjugate pairs. Example: If 3 + 2i is a root of a polynomial, what is another root of the polynomial? What is the corresponding factor? EXAMPLE OF FINDING ROOTS Solve 𝑥 4 + 𝑥 3 + 2𝑥 2 + 4𝑥 − 8 = 0 by finding all roots. Step 1: Use the Rational Roots Theorem to identify possible rational roots. EXAMPLE OF FINDING ROOTS Solve 𝑥 4 + 𝑥 3 + 2𝑥 2 + 4𝑥 − 8 = 0 by finding all roots. Step 2: Graph the polynomial to narrow down your options. EXAMPLE OF FINDING ROOTS Solve 𝑥 4 + 𝑥 3 + 2𝑥 2 + 4𝑥 − 8 = 0 by finding all roots. Step 3: Test the possible real roots to help factor the polynomial down to a quadratic. Then find remaining zeros. EXAMPLE OF WRITING A POLYNOMIAL FUNCTION GIVEN ZEROS Write the simplest polynomial function with zeros 1 + i, 2, and -3. HOMEWORK P. 121, #24-25, 30-35 Pg. 127-128, #12-32 even, 38-43