bloodhound Posted January 2, 2005 Posted January 2, 2005 solve what? i assume u mean finding the root of that function it looks like u will need to find the roots of a quartic of a form ax^4 + bx^3 + c = 0 there should be a general formula for that, i dont know it. lemme just try to look for it on the net
bloodhound Posted January 2, 2005 Posted January 2, 2005 well do it this way. [math]x^{2}(x-1)-\frac{2}{x}=0[/math] [math]x^{3}-x^{2}=\frac{2}{x}[/math] [math]x^{4}-x^{3}-2=0[/math] then -1 iby inspection is a root, therefore (x+1) is a factor of f(x). then you can reduce the polynomial into a quintic information on solving quartic http://mathworld.wolfram.com/QuarticEquation.html there is also a link at the bottom to solutions to quintic I banged the equation into Maple, and the solutions are horrible. the only nice solutions is -1, the others are massive strings of numbers.
JaKiri Posted January 2, 2005 Posted January 2, 2005 That should have been fairly obvious, as you can see that x +- 2 can't be a factor, so you've straight ruled out all the other integrals.
bloodhound Posted January 2, 2005 Posted January 2, 2005 jakiri i dont understand your last sentence, could u explain in more detail.
Dave Posted January 3, 2005 Posted January 3, 2005 I think he meant intervals instead of integrals, but I could be wrong.
kingjewel1 Posted January 3, 2005 Author Posted January 3, 2005 thanks. i could see the -1 as being factor but i thought there might be a way to figure out the other one(s): relatively easily i've looked on the net but i don't seem to be coming up with any answer. :S
bloodhound Posted January 3, 2005 Posted January 3, 2005 well u know there is 1 real root, so there must be another real root, and then two complex roots which are conjugates. here is my screenshot from maple
JaKiri Posted January 3, 2005 Posted January 3, 2005 I think he meant intervals instead of integrals, but I could be wrong. All the other integral roots. You have an equation which ends in a prime. To factorise it into an (x+a)(x+b)(x+....) form, a*b*c*whatever must equal the prime. To get integral values, one of those numbers must be the prime, and the rest must be one, by the definition of a prime number. As it's fairly clear that 2 is not a factor, the solutions therefore can't be nice integrals.
bloodhound Posted January 3, 2005 Posted January 3, 2005 Another useful test in factorising polynomials over rationals, or to test if it has any rational roots would be the Rational Root Test
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