Math, asked by soumilimondal2226, 4 months ago

Find the root of quadratic equation

Answers

Answered by devu2470
0

Answer:

The roots of any quadratic equation is given by: x = [-b +/- sqrt(-b^2 - 4ac)]/2a. Write down the quadratic in the form of ax^2 + bx + c = 0. If the equation is in the form y = ax^2 + bx +c, simply replace the y with 0. This is done because the roots of the equation are the values where the y axis is equal to 0.

Answered by anshuraj10
0

Answer:

The roots of any quadratic equation is given by: x = [-b +/- sqrt(-b^2 - 4ac)]/2a. Write down the quadratic in the form of ax^2 + bx + c = 0. If the equation is in the form y = ax^2 + bx +c, simply replace the y with 0. This is done because the roots of the equation are the values where the y axis is equal to 0.

Step-by-step explanation:

FOLLOW ME

LIKE MY ANSWER

Similar questions