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Polynomial & Synthetic Division MATH 109 - Precalculus S. Rook Overview • Section 2.3 in the textbook: – Polynomial long division – Synthetic division – Remainder & factor theorems 2 Polynomial Long Division Polynomial Long Division • Recall that there are four main steps in long division which cycle until the last digit is brought down: – Division – Multiplication – Subtraction – Bring Down • Can write the result in the form: n = q · k + r where n is the dividend (number inside), q is the quotient, k is the divisor (number outside), and r is the remainder • Applies to polynomial long division – Need to remember to apply the Distributive Property when necessary 4 Polynomial Long Division (Continued) • Some tips for polynomial division: – Write the polynomial in descending degree – Fill any missing terms with placeholder zeros – When performing the division step, use the highest term of the divisor (polynomial outside) • Polynomial division is helpful because in most cases it is easier to examine a lower degree quotient than the original polynomial – i.e. Breaks the original polynomial apart – E.g. (x3 – 1) / (x – 1) → (x3 – 1) = (x2 + x + 1) · (x – 1) + 0 • A remainder of 0 indicates that (x – 1) is a factor of (x3 – 1) which means it divides evenly 5 Polynomial Long Division (Example) Ex 1: Use polynomial division: a) 8 x 6 x3 10 x 2 2 x 2 1 b) 4 x3 11x 5 x 2 6 Synthetic Division Synthetic Division • A faster variant of polynomial long division • Can be used ONLY when the divisor is in the form (x – k) – i.e. When the divisor is linear – Polynomial long division can be used for any polynomial divisor • Synthetic division has two main steps which cycle: – Multiply – Add • Remember to put the dividend into descending degree 8 Synthetic Division (Continued) • To perform a synthetic division: – Consider just the coefficients of the dividend • Synthetic division uses ONLY numbers • Insert a 0 for any term that may be missing – If given a divisor in the form of a factor (x – k), convert it to a zero of the form x = k • E.g. (x – 5) → x = 5 and (2x + 3) → x = -3⁄2 – Bring down the first digit of the dividend • After performing the division: – Write the quotient as a polynomial starting with one degree less than the dividend – The last column represents the remainder 9 Setting Up a Synthetic Division • The following represents how (x3 – 1) / (x – 1) would be set up as a synthetic division: – What do you notice? • The dividend is missing x2 and x • The factor of (x – 1) is converted to the zero x = 1 – What is the quotient written as a polynomial? x2 + x + 1 10 Synthetic Division (Example) Ex 2: Use synthetic division: a) 2 x 2 10 x 12 x 4 4 x 3 16 x 2 23x 15 b) 1 x 2 11 Remainder & Factor Theorems Remainder Theorem • Sometimes we just need to examine the remainder of a division • Remainder Theorem: given the polynomial function f(x), the remainder of f(x) / (x – k) is f(k) when (x – k) is linear – i.e. Convert x – k to the zero x = k and evaluate in f(x) to obtain the remainder – E.g. f(x) = x3 – 1 → remainder of x3 – 1 / x – 1 = f(1) = 0 – E.g. f(x) = 2x2 – 3x + 4 → remainder of 2x2 – 3x + 4 / x + 2 = f(-2) = 18 • Can verify via polynomial division or synthetic division 13 Factor Theorem • Especially important is the case when the remainder is 0 • Factor Theorem: (x – k) is a factor of the polynomial function f(x) if f(k) = 0 – i.e. Recall that f(k) = 0 means the remainder is 0 – i.e. (x – k) divides evenly into f(x) 14 Remainder & Factor Theorems (Example) Ex 3: a) Use the Factor Theorem to show that x comprises a factor of f(x) b) Use synthetic division to reduce f(x) c) Factor the resulting polynomial completely, listing both the factored form of f(x) and its real zeros f(x) = x3 – 7x + 6; x = 2 15 Summary • After studying these slides, you should be able to: – Perform polynomial division – Synthetic division – Apply the Remainder & Factor Theorems • Additional Practice – See the list of suggested problems for 2.3 • Next lesson – Complex Numbers (Section 2.4) 16