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Unit 11: Factoring Section 1: Prime Factorization • To find the prime factorization of a whole number, it is best to start by making a factor tree • Write all answers in standard form (ascending order of prime factors) • Ex1. Name all of the factors of 24 • Ex2. Name the first 4 multiples of 5 • By the Common Factor Sum Property, if two numbers have a factor in common, then the factor will also go into their sum (and their difference) • Prime numbers are only divisible by one and the original number • Composite numbers have more than 2 factors • Ex3. Write the prime factorization of 630 in standard form • You can use prime factorization to quickly multiply and divide large numbers • Ex4. Write the prime factorization of 616 · 980 616 • Ex5. Write the prime factorization of 980 • Section of the book to read: 12-1 Section 2: Common Monomial Factoring • Common monomial factoring is the reverse of the distributive property • You will be factoring out the greatest common factor from each term and showing what it looked like before the distributive property was applied • Ex1. List all of the factors of 9x³ 3 2 36x y • Ex2. Find the greatest common factor of 5 and 8x y • Page 767 shows you a visual way to factor • The factorization is not complete until you have factored out all of the common factors (that is why it is best to use the greatest common factor) 2 3 4 5 3 4 32 a b 24 a b 36 a b • Ex3. Factor 3 5 4 5 2 2 3 4 6 2 3 • Ex4. Factor 20 x yz 35x y z 15x y z 40 x y z 3 2 2 3 12 x y 22 x y • Ex5. Factor and simplify x 24a3b 4 28a 4b3 16a 2b5 a 2b • Ex6. Factor and simplify • Section of the book to read: 12-2 Section 3: Factoring x² + bx + c • In Unit 2 Section 12 we learned how to FOIL when multiplying 2 binomials • Ex1. Multiply (x + 4)(x – 9) • In this section, we will be doing the reverse of FOIL, determining what two binomials must have been multiplied to create the given trinomial • For this section only, 1 will be the only coefficient used for the x² term, so the first term in each binomial will be the variable • The two last terms will add to be b and multiply to be c • Watch your signs!!! • Ex2. Factor x² + 7x + 12 • Ex3. Factor x² – 13x +40 • Ex4. Factor x² + x – 42 • If your factorization results in two identical binomials, the trinomial is called a perfect square trinomial • Some trinomials cannot be factored using integers, those are said to be prime • You can factor a binomial into two binomials if it is a difference of squares (Unit 2 section 13) • Ex5. Factor y² - 36 • Ex6. Factor g² + 25 • Sometimes you will need to perform common monomial factoring first, and then factor the quadratic that remains (ALWAYS test for this possibility first) • Ex7. Factor 4 x 5 20 x 4 96 x 3 • Section of the book to read: 12-3 Section 4: Factoring ax² + bx + c • Just like section 3, factoring these types of quadratics will be the reverse of FOIL • There is an extra degree of difficulty with these, because now you must make sure that when you FOIL the two binomials, every term is correct • You can start by guessing and checking, but your basic math skills and number sense should help you find the answer quickly • First · first = ax² and last · last = c • • • • • Ex1. Factor 2x² + 13x + 15 Ex2. Factor 3x² + 11x – 4 Ex3. Factor 6x² + 7x + 2 Ex4. Factor 8x² + 2x – 15 You can use factorization to solve quadratic equations (must be = 0) • Once you have factored, set each binomial = 0 and solve for the variable (next section) • Section of the book to read: 12-5 Section 5: Solving Some Quadratic Equations by Factoring • As discussed in the last section, sometimes you can solve quadratic equations by factoring • Once factored, set each binomial (and monomial if there was first common monomial factoring) equal to 0 and solve for the variable • The degree of the polynomial tells you how many potential solutions there are • Ex1. Solve 3w(2w + 1)(5w – 4) = 0 • In Unit 7 Section 6, we learned that the Quadratic Formula is one way to solve quadratic equations (as is factoring) • The Quadratic Formula can always be used, factoring can only be used at times • Solve by factoring • Ex2. 6x² - 16x = 0 Ex3. 12x² + 17x = -6 • Ex4. Solve 12x² + 11x – 15 = 0 • Ex6. 16x³ + 32x² + 12x = 0 • Section of the book to read: 12-4 Section 6: Which Quadratic Expressions are Factorable? • Some quadratic expressions are not factorable using integers (they are prime) • When using the quadratic formula, we found that many solutions were irrational (these would not be factorable) • Using ax² + bx + c; if a, b, and c are all rational numbers and the discriminant (b² - 4ac) is a perfect square, then you can factor the expression (Discriminant Theorem) • • • • Ex1. Is 8 + 4x² + 3x factorable? Ex2. Solve 3x² + 5x – 2 = 0 Ex3. Solve 7x² - 6x – 9 = 0 Unless otherwise directed, you may solve using the quadratic formula or by factoring • Section of the book to read: 12-8