Math, asked by anusreeajaykumar3, 7 months ago

If alpha and beta are the zeroes of the polynomial 2x^2+x-5 then find a polynomial qhose zeroes are alpha÷beta +beta÷alpha

Answers

Answered by nonigopalbarman857
1

Answer:

NOTE :-

α² + β² can be written as (α + β)² - 2αβ

p(x) = 2x² - 5x + 7

a = 2 , b = - 5 , c = 7

α and β are the zeros of p(x)

we know that ,

sum of zeros = α + β

= -b/a

= 5/2

product of zeros = c/a

= 7/2

===============================================

2α + 3β and 3α + 2β are zeros of a polynomial.

sum of zeros = 2α + 3β+ 3α + 2β

= 5α + 5β

= 5 [ α + β]

= 5 × 5/2

= 25/2

product of zeros = (2α + 3β)(3α + 2β)

= 2α [ 3α + 2β] + 3β [3α + 2β]

= 6α² + 4αβ + 9αβ + 6β²

= 6α² + 13αβ + 6β²

= 6 [ α² + β² ] + 13αβ

= 6 [ (α + β)² - 2αβ ] + 13αβ

= 6 [ ( 5/2)² - 2 × 7/2 ] + 13× 7/2

= 6 [ 25/4 - 7 ] + 91/2

= 6 [ 25/4 - 28/4 ] + 91/2

= 6 [ -3/4 ] + 91/2

= -18/4 + 91/2

= -9/2 + 91/2

= 82/2

= 41

-18/4 = -9/2 [ simplest form ]

a quadratic polynomial is given by :-

k { x² - (sum of zeros)x + (product of zeros) }

k {x² - 5/2x + 41}

k = 2

2 {x² - 5/2x + 41 ]

2x² - 5x + 82 -----> is the required polynomial

hope it helps

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