Math, asked by punnayyarapaka4, 11 months ago

write the polynomial in variable x whose zero is -k÷a​

Answers

Answered by APJimmy
6

A polynomial in a variable x with certain zero value means that: if we used this zero value in the equation of the polynomial we will get zero.

we have a general form of a polynomial as follows:

x^{1}+x^{2}+x^{3}+...+x^{n}=0

we need to get our polynomial in this form

as we have x=\frac{-k}{a}

to simplify we can multiply both sides by a

a*x=-k

and if we added +k to both sides

a*x+k=0 which would be the required polynomial.

Answered by amitnrw
2

aX + k = 0  is a Polynomial with degree 1 in variable X whose zero is -k/a

Step-by-step explanation:

write the polynomial in variable X whose zero is -k/a

=>  (X - (-k/a) = 0

=> X + k/a =  0

=> aX + k = 0

aX + k = 0  is a Polynomial with degree 1  in variable X whose zero is -k/a

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