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Chapter 3 Study Guide 3.1 Polynomials The degree of a polynomial is the value of the exponent of the term of the greatest degree. A polynomial is in standard form when the terms are arranged in order with exponents from greatest to least. To arrange the polynomial 3x 2 x 4 2x 6x 5 7 in standard form, order the terms greatest to least exponent Degree Polynomial in Standard Form 0 8 1 2x 3 2 x 4x 5 3 4x 3 x 4 6x 4 x 3 5x 2 3x 1 5 9x 5 x 3 1 Constants have degree 0. This third degree polynomial has 2 terms. 2 6 is the leading coefficient of this polynomial. This fifth degree polynomial has 3 terms. 6x 5 x 4 3x 2 2x 7 To add polynomials: − Write each polynomial in standard form. − Align like terms vertically. − Add like terms. Add: 6 x 2 x 3 5 x 2 1 4 x 2 2 x x 3 . 2x 5x 6x 1 x 3 4x 2 2x 3 2 3x 3 x 2 8x 1 To subtract polynomials, add the opposite vertically. Subtract: 6 x 2 x 3 5 x 2 1 4 x 2 2 x x 3 . Add the opposite: 6 x 2 x 3 5 x 2 1 4 x 2 2 x x 3 . 2x 3 5x 2 6x 1 (x 3 4x 2 2x) Add like terms vertically. x 3 9x 2 4x 1 Write each polynomial in standard form. Add or subtract. 1. 3 x 2 2 x 3 x 6 x 2 x 2 1 2. 6 x 2 4 x 1 2 x x 2 1 3.2 Multiplying Polynomials Use the Distributive Property to multiply two polynomials. Distribute each term of the first polynomial to each term of the second polynomial. Multiply: (x 2)(4x 2 3x 1). Horizontal Method: (x 2)(4x 2 3x 1) [x(4x 2) x(3x) x(1)] [2(4x 2) 2(3x) 2(1)] 4x 3 3x 2 x 8x 2 6x 2 Multiply. 4x 3 3x 2 8x 2 x 6x 2 Group like terms. 4x 3 5x 2 7x 2 Combine like terms. 3. (x 3)(x 2 2x 1) 4. (x 3) 3 3.3 Dividing Polynomials Divide: (6x 2 x 8) (2x 1). Step 1 Divide the first term of the dividend, 6x 2, by the first term of the divisor, 2x. 3x 2x 1 6 x x 8 2 Divide: 6x 2 2x 3x. (6x 2 3x) 4x 8 Multiply the complete divisor: 3x(2x 1) 6x 2 3x. Subtract and bring down. Remember to use the Step 2 Divide the first term of the difference, 4x, by the Distributive Property first term of the divisor, 2x. when you subtract. 3x 2 2x 1 6 x 2 x 8 (6x 2 3x) 4x 8 (4x 2) 10 Multiply: 3x(2x 1) 6x 2 3x. Divide: 4x 2x 2. Multiply the complete divisor: 2(2x 1) 4x 2. Subtract. Use the Distributive Property. Step 3 Write the quotient including the remainder. 6x 2 x 8 2x 1 3 x 2 10 2x 1 When the divisor is in the form (x a), use synthetic division to divide. Divide: (2x 2 x 10) (x 3). Step 1 Find a. The divisor is (x 3). So, a 3. Step 2 Write a in the upper left corner. Then write the coefficients of the dividend. 3 2 1 10 2, 1, and 10 are the coefficients of 2x 2 x 10. Step 3 Draw a horizontal line. Copy the first coefficient below the line. 3 2 1 10 2 Step 4 Multiply the first coefficient by a, or 3. Write the product in the second column. Add the numbers in the column. 3 2 1 10 6 2 5 2a 2(3) 6 Step 5 Multiply that sum by a, or 3. Write the product in the third column. Add the numbers in the column. Draw a box around the last number. It is the remainder. 3 2 1 10 6 15 2 5 5 Step 6 Write the quotient. 5. x 5 3 x 2 5 x 50 5a 5(3) 15 The numbers 5 in the bottom row are the 2x 5 of the quotient. coefficients x 3 6. 3 x 2 6 x 2 7 x 6 Use synthetic division to divide. 7.(4x 2 7x 10) (x 2) 8. (2x 2 6x 12) (x 5) 3.4 Factoring Polynomials Sometimes you can use grouping to factor a third degree polynomial. To factor by grouping means to group terms with common factors. Then factor the common factors. Continue to factor until the expression can no longer be factored. Factor: x 3 4x 2 9x 36. Start by grouping terms to factor out the greatest possible power of x. x 3 4x 2 9x 36 9 is a factor of 9 and 36. x 2 is a factor of 3 2 2 (x 4x ) (9x 36) x and 4x . (x 4) is a common factor. x 2(x 4) 9(x 4) (x 2 9) is the difference of squares. (x 4) (x 2 9) (x 4) (x 3) (x 3) Recall that (a 2 b 2) (a b) (a b). So (x 2 9) (x 3) (x 3). Use special rules to factor the sum or difference of two cubes. Recognizing these common cubes can help you factor the sum or difference of cubes. 1 3 1, 2 3 8, 3 3 27, 4 3 64, 5 3 125, and 6 3 216 Rule for the Sum of Two Cubes: a 3 b 3 (a b)(a 2 ab b 2). Factor: y 3 64. y 3 64 Identify the cubes: y 3 and 64 4 3. y3 43 Write the expression as the sum of two cubes. (y + 4)(y 2 4y 16) Use the rule to factor. Rule for the Difference of Two Cubes: a 3 b 3 (a b) (a 2 ab b 2). Factor: 8x 3 125. 8x 3 125 Identify the cubes: (2x) 3 and 125 5 3. (2x) 3 5 3 Write the expression as the difference of two cubes. (2x 5)(4x 10x 25) 2 Use the rule to factor. Using the rule: a 2x and b 5. So a 2 (2x) 2 4x 2, ab (2x)(5) 10x, and b 2 25. Factor each expression. 9. x 3 3x 2 4x 12 11. y 3 27 10. x 3 6x 2 x 6 12. x 3 1 3.5 Finding Real Roots of Polynomial Equations To find the roots of a polynomial equation, set the equation equal to zero. Factor the polynomial expression completely. Then set each factor equal to zero to solve for the variable. Solve the equation: 2x 5 6x 4 8x 3. Step 1 To set the equation equal to 0, rearrange the equation so that all the terms are on one side. 2x 5 6x 4 8x 3 2x 5 6x 4 8x 3 0 Step 2 Look for the greatest number and the greatest power of x that can be factored from each term. 2x 5 6x 4 8x 3 0 The GCF is 2x 3. 2x 3(x 2 3x 4) 0 Step 3 Factor the quadratic. 2x 3(x 2 3x 4) 0 2x 3(x 4) (x 1) 0 Step 4 Set each factor equal to 0. 2x 3 0 Step 5 x40 x10 Solve each equation. 2x 3 0 x40 x0 x 4 x10 x1 The solutions of the equation are called the roots. The roots are 4, 0, and 1. 13. 2x 3 6x 2 36x 0 14. 2x 6 32x 4 0 3.6 Fundamental Theorem of Algebra Write the simplest polynomial function with roots 4, 2, and 3. Step 1 Write the factors of the polynomial, P(x) 0. (x 4)(x 2)(x 3) 0 Step 2 Multiply the first two factors, (x 4)(x 2). (x 2 6x 8)(x 3) 0 Step 3 Multiply (x 2 6x 8)(x 3). Then simplify. Root (a) 4 2 3 Factor (x a) x4 x2 x3 x 3 3x 2 6x 2 18x 8x 24 0 x 3 3x 2 10x 24 0 The function is P(x) x 3 3x 2 10x 24 0. To solve x 4 x 3 5x 2 x 6 0 means to find all the roots of the equation. A fourth degree equation has 4 roots. Step 1 Identify possible real roots. Possible roots,: 1, 2, 3, 6 Graph y x 4 x 3 5x 2 x 6. Step 2 Step 3 Test 2 as a root using synthetic substitution. 2 1 1 5 1 6 2 6 2 6 1 3 1 3 0 Test 3 as a root using synthetic substitution. 3 1 3 1 3 3 0 3 1 0 1 0 Step 4 Find the remaining roots. The remainder is 0, so 2 is a root. (x 2)(x 3 3x 2 x 3) 0 The remainder is 0, so 3 is a root. (x 2) (x 3) (x 2 1) 0 x2 1 0 xi The roots of the equation are 2, 3, i, and i. Write the simplest polynomial function with the given roots. 15. 5, 1, and 2 Solve the equation by finding all roots. 16. x 3 6x 2 2x 12 0 3.7 Investigating Graphs of Polynomial Functions Examine the sign and the exponent of the leading term (term of greatest degree) of a polynomial P(x) to determine the end behavior of the function. Even degree functions: Exponent of leading term is even. Read: Positive leading coefficient Negative leading coefficient As x approaches As x , P(x) . As x , P(x) . positive infinity, P(x) As x , P(x) . As x , P(x) . approaches negative infinity. Example: P(x) 3x 4 2x 3 5 End behavior: Leading term: 3x 4 Sign: positive Degree: 4, even As x , P(x) . As x , P(x) . Odd degree functions: Exponent of leading term is odd. Positive leading coefficient As x , P(x) . As x , P(x) . Negative leading coefficient As x , P(x) . As x , P(x) . Example: P(x) 2x 5 6x 2 x Leading term: 2x 5 Sign: negative Degree: 5, odd Fill in the table below: Polynomial 17 P(x) x 2 3x 6 Leading Coefficient Degree End Behavior As x , P(x) As x , P(x) 18. P(x) 3x 3 2x 5 As x , P(x) ____ As x , P(x) ____ 3.8 Transforming Polynomial Functions Write the rule for function g(x). 19. g(x) reflects f(x) x 3 2x 3 across the x-axis and translate 1 unit up 20. g(x) reflects f(x) x 2 x 1 across the y-axis and translate 2 units left 3.9 Curve Fitting with Polynomial Models Finite Differences Function Type Linear Quadratic Cubic Quartic Quintic 1 2 3 4 5 First Second Third Fourth Fifth Degree Constant Finite Differences x 10 20 30 40 50 y 2633 3812 4862 6529 9552 First Differences 3812 2633 4862 3812 6529 4862 9552 6529 1179 1050 1667 3023 Second Differences Third Differences 1050 1179 1667 1050 3023 1667 129 617 1356 617 (129) 1356 617 746 739 Since the third differences are reasonably close, you can use a cubic function to model the data. Use the cubic regression feature on your calculator. Use the coefficients a, b, c, and d to write the function. f(x) 0.12x 3 8.06x 2 273.1x 584.6 Use finite differences to determine the degree of the polynomial that best describes the data. 21. x 0 1 2 3 4 5 y 5 1 12 29 53 85 a. Which differences are constant? b. Identify the degree of the polynomial of best fit. c. Write the function __________________________