levin irmak Posted October 8, 2011 Posted October 8, 2011 p(x)=a1x1+a2x2+......anxn is a polynomial if the polynomial is divisible by x+c where c is real number we get; p(x)= q(x).(x+c) x+c=0 x=-c if plug that in to the division we get; q(x).(x+c)/(x+c) p(x)= 0/0 although this is a clear contradiction, why is it still possible to use it in mathematical calculations and give us right answer??? sincerely yours;
swansont Posted October 8, 2011 Posted October 8, 2011 although this is a clear contradiction Illegal operations can't give you a valid contradiction — you divided by zero.
DrRocket Posted October 9, 2011 Posted October 9, 2011 (edited) p(x)=a1x1+a2x2+......anxn is a polynomial if the polynomial is divisible by x+c where c is real number we get; p(x)= q(x).(x+c) x+c=0 x=-c if plug that in to the division we get; q(x).(x+c)/(x+c) p(x)= 0/0 although this is a clear contradiction, why is it still possible to use it in mathematical calculations and give us right answer??? sincerely yours; You can divide by the abstract polynomial x+c in the polynomial ring over the real numbers, and you are not dividing by the zero polynomial, so the operation is perfectly correct. Later you can evaluate the resulting function at x=-c if you like, and if you do it properly you will be dividing by zero. Edited October 9, 2011 by DrRocket
mathematic Posted October 9, 2011 Posted October 9, 2011 (edited) p(x)=a1x1+a2x2+......anxn is a polynomial if the polynomial is divisible by x+c where c is real number we get; p(x)= q(x).(x+c) x+c=0 x=-c if plug that in to the division we get; q(x).(x+c)/(x+c) p(x)= 0/0 although this is a clear contradiction, why is it still possible to use it in mathematical calculations and give us right answer??? sincerely yours; Once you divide by (x+c) you will get q(x), not p(x). Edited October 9, 2011 by mathematic
levin irmak Posted October 11, 2011 Author Posted October 11, 2011 Once you divide by (x+c) you will get q(x), not p(x). p(x)= q(x). x+c/x+c it is still p(x) but written by its factors You can divide by the abstract polynomial x+c in the polynomial ring over the real numbers, and you are not dividing by the zero polynomial, so the operation is perfectly correct. Later you can evaluate the resulting function at x=-c if you like, and if you do it properly you will be dividing by zero. this made it clear, still it turn out to be the same question , is 1/(1/0) =o or undefined ???
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now