Math, asked by piyush2696, 1 year ago

The zeroes of
of polynomial p(x)are precisely the x-coordinates of the point, where the graph of Y =p(x)intersects the
(a) X-axis (b) Y-axis (c) origin (d) non-of the above​

Answers

Answered by vaishnavikothawade21
39

Answer:

(a) x-axis is the answer

Answered by SaurabhJacob
3

Given:

The zeroes of polynomial p(x)are precisely the x-coordinates of the point

To Find:

Where the graph of Y =p(x) intersects

Solution:

  • The solutions to the equation p (x) = 0, where p (x) represents the polynomial, are the zeros of a polynomial.
  • If we graph this polynomial as y = p (x), we can see that the values of x where y = 0 are as follows. In other words, these are the graph's x-intercepts.  This means where the graph intercepts the x-axis.
  • At the Y-axis y is not zero so it is not a zero of the polynomial. At origin, both x and y are zero.

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