Math, asked by raveenagosai833, 1 month ago

explain zero of the polynomial with example​

Answers

Answered by pranilchipkar
1

Step-by-step explanation:

Zeros of a polynomial can be defined as the points where the polynomial becomes zero as a whole. A polynomial having value zero (0) is called zero polynomial. The degree of a polynomial is the highest power of the variable x. ... x2+ 3x + 4 is an example for quadratic polynomial.

Answered by MiracleBrain
6

Answer :

How to Find Zeros of Polynomials

Zeros of a polynomial can be defined as the points where the polynomial becomes zero as a whole. A polynomial having value zero (0) is called zero polynomial. The degree of a polynomial is the highest power of the variable x.

A polynomial of degree 1 is known as a linear polynomial.

The standard form is ax + b, where a and b are real numbers and a≠0.

2x + 3 is a linear polynomial.

A polynomial of degree 2 is known as a quadratic polynomial.

Standard form is ax2 + bx + c, where a, b and c are real numbers and a ≠ 0

x2+ 3x + 4 is an example for quadratic polynomial.

Polynomial of degree 3 is known as a cubic polynomial.

Standard form is ax3+ bx2 + cx + d, where a, b, c and d are real numbers and a≠0.

x3 + 4x + 2 is an example for cubic polynomial.

Similarly,

y6 + 3y4 + y is a polynomial in y of degree 6.

Points to remember:

‘0’ could be a zero of polynomial but it is not necessarily a zero has to be ‘0’ only.

All the linear polynomials have only one zero.

The zeros of the polynomial,

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