Math, asked by manat4667, 1 year ago

A quadratic polynomial has one of its zeros as 1+√5 and it satisfies p(1)=2.find the quadratic polynomial

Answers

Answered by TheGENIUSBoy
5
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Answered by SocioMetricStar
5

Answer:

p(x)=-\frac{2}{5}(x^2-2x-4)

Step-by-step explanation:

We have been given the zero  1 + √5.

We know that irrational roots always occurs in pairs. Hence,  1 - √5 is the second zero.

Hence, the quadratic polynomial is

p(x) =a(x-1-\sqrt5)(x-1+\sqrt5)\\p(x)=a(x^2-2x-4)

Now, given that p(1)=2

2=a(1^2-2(1)-4)\\2=-5a\\\\a=-\frac{2}{5}

Hence, the quadratic polynomial is

p(x)=-\frac{2}{5}(x^2-2x-4)

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