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Section 8.3 The Discriminant and the Nature of Solutions    The Discriminant Type and Number of Solutions Writing Equations from Solutions 8.3 1 Introducing … The Discriminant!   is the Radicand Part of the Quadratic Equation  b  b 2  4ac x 2a It predicts the types of solutions. If b2 – 4ac is      positive: two different real numbers 0: one real (two equal real numbers) negative: two different complex numbers positive perfect square: two different rational numbers positive but imperfect: two different irrational numbers 8.3 2 What Types of Solutions? b2 – 4ac 9 x  12 x  4  0 2 (12) 2  4(9)( 4)  144  144 x  5x  8  0 2 (5) 2  4(1)(8)  25  32 2x  7x  3  0 2 (7) 2  4(2)( 3)  49  24 x 40 2 (0)  4(1)( 4)  0  16 2 0 7 73 16 8.3 3 Writing Equations from Solutions     We can use the reverse of the Principle of Zero Products (x – 2)(x + 3) = 0 means solutions x = 2 and x= -3 Think: x2 + x – 6 = 0 is equivalent to 2x2 + 2x – 12 = 0 Many quadratic equations can have the same solutions 5 )0 ( x  3 )( x  2 Find an equation having solutions:     x = 3 and x = 5/2 ( x  2i )( x  2i )  0 x = ±2i x  4i  0 x 40 x = ±5 7 x = 0, x = -4 and x = 1 x( x  4)( x  1)  0 2 2 x( x 2  3x  4)  0 8.3 2 x 2  112 x  15 2  0 2 x 2  11x  15  0 ( x  5 7 )( x  5 7 )  0 x 2  25  7  0 x 2  175  0 x 3  3x 2  4 x  0 4 What Next? Quadratic Applications  Section 8.4 8.3 5