Math, asked by Dineshvdk, 1 year ago

Please answer my question

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Answered by dhruv558961
0

Answer:

answer \: of \: this \: question \: is \\  3.( \frac{1}{4} p - 2q)( \frac{1}{4} p + 2q)

Step-by-step explanation:

we have to factorise:

 \frac{1}{16}  {p}^{2}  - 4 {q}^{2}

 =  {( \frac{1}{4}p) }^{2}  -  {(2q)}^{2}

now \: using \: the \: identity \:  \\ a^2 - b^2 =(a+b)(a-b)

( \frac{1}{4} p - 2q)( \frac{1}{4}p  + 2q)

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Answered by Anonymous
0

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<marquee direction="left">your answer is option C

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