Math, asked by shivanshnigam19, 1 month ago

Find the roots of the quadratic equation????​

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Answered by KishanKumar0001
0

Answer:

x =  \frac{ \sqrt{29} }{2}  +  \frac{5}{2}  \:   or \: \frac{ \sqrt{29} }{2}   -   \frac{5}{2}  \:  \\ or \: \frac{ -  \sqrt{ 13} }{2}  +  \frac{3}{2}  \:   or \: \frac{  - \sqrt{13} }{2}   -   \frac{3}{2}  \:

Step-by-step explanation:

Because there is a term related to square of x² which is x⁴ so 4 roots will come as answer...

Note: You have just to use {-b+_ √(b²-4ac)}/2a to solve the equation..

Here is an explanatory solution for that.

Thanks

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Answered by ngounoudavid99
0

Answer:

One of the roots of this equation is (x-1)

Step-by-step explanation:

though I found only one root this how I did to come out with it

check the attachment below.

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