Math, asked by rikeshpatel880, 6 hours ago

11. What is zeros of a polynomial ?​

Answers

Answered by HARGUN00
1

Answer:

The zeros of a polynomial p(x) are all the x-values that make the polynomial equal to zero. They are interesting to us for many reasons, one of which is that they tell us about the x-intercepts of the polynomial's graph. We will also see that they are directly related to the factors of the polynomial.

Answered by Anonymous
1

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The zeros of a polynomial p(x) are all the x-values that make the polynomial equal to zero. They are interesting to us for many reasons, one of which is that they tell us about the x-intercepts of the polynomial's graph. We will also see that they are directly related to the factors of the polynomial.

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Answered by Anonymous
1

\huge\mathbb\colorbox{black}{\color{red}{AnSwEr}}

The zeros of a polynomial p(x) are all the x-values that make the polynomial equal to zero. They are interesting to us for many reasons, one of which is that they tell us about the x-intercepts of the polynomial's graph. We will also see that they are directly related to the factors of the polynomial.

\huge\mathbb\colorbox{black}{\color{red}{Hope\:It\:Help\:U}}

Answered by Anonymous
1

\huge\mathbb\colorbox{black}{\color{red}{AnSwEr}}

The zeros of a polynomial p(x) are all the x-values that make the polynomial equal to zero. They are interesting to us for many reasons, one of which is that they tell us about the x-intercepts of the polynomial's graph. We will also see that they are directly related to the factors of the polynomial.

\huge\mathbb\colorbox{black}{\color{red}{Hope\:It\:Help\:U}}

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