Introduction: Symmetrical Properties of Roots

The general form of a quadratic equation is \(ax^2+bx+c=0\), where \(a,b\) and \(c\) are constants and \(a\neq 0\). Dividing by \(a\) throughout, we get

x2+bax+ca=0(1)x^2+\frac{b}{a}x+\frac{c}{a}=0\cdots(1)

If the roots of the equation are α\alpha and β\beta, we can then write the equation with roots α\alpha and β\beta in the form

x=αorx=βx=\alpha \quad \text{or} \quad x=\beta

    (xα)(xβ)=0\implies (x-\alpha)(x-\beta)=0

    x2(α+β)x+αβ=0(2)\implies x^2-(\alpha+\beta)x+\alpha\beta=0\cdots(2)

Comparing (1)(1) and (2)(2), we see that

Sum of roots=α+β=ba\text{Sum of roots}=\alpha+\beta=-\frac{b}{a}

Product of roots=αβ=ca\text{Product of roots}=\alpha\beta=\frac{c}{a}

#Algebra #Vieta'sFormula #VictorLoh #SymmetricalPropertiesofRoots

Note by Victor Loh
6 years, 10 months ago

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Comments

Great note @Victor Loh

Mardokay Mosazghi - 6 years, 10 months ago

Nice set! The problems are hard but managed to solve them all.

Daniel Lim - 6 years, 10 months ago

Thank you :) @Mardokay Mosazghi

Victor Loh - 6 years, 10 months ago
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