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9-6 The Quadratic Formula and Discriminant

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1 9-6 The Quadratic Formula and Discriminant

2 Writing Quadratic Equations in Standard Form
ax² + bx + c = 0 a, b, and c should be on the same side of the equal sign a should always be positive Ex. 3x² + 2x = -5 3x² + 2x + 5 = 0

3 If ax² + bx + c = 0 and a ≠ 0, then 𝒙= −𝒃± 𝒃 𝟐 −𝟒𝒂𝒄 𝟐𝒂
Quadratic Formula If ax² + bx + c = 0 and a ≠ 0, then 𝒙= −𝒃± 𝒃 𝟐 −𝟒𝒂𝒄 𝟐𝒂

4 Solving using the Quadratic Formula
Use ax² +bx + c = 0 to substitute a, b, and c into 𝒙= −𝒃± 𝒃 𝟐 −𝟒𝒂𝒄 𝟐𝒂 **caution** if ‘b’ is negative (ax² - bx + c + 0), you will still need to use the negative sign from the equation. You will end up with a double negative (which will make ‘b’ positive) **if ‘b’ is negative then: 𝑥= −−𝑏± 𝑏 2 −4𝑎𝑐 2𝑎 = 𝑥= 𝑏± 𝑏 2 −4𝑎𝑐 2𝑎

5 Examples a) x² - 8 = 2x b) 2x² + 5x + 3 = 0

6 Discriminant The expression under the radical of the quadratic formula
b² - 4ac

7 Real Solutions of the Discriminant
# of Real Solutions Graph > 0 = 0 < 0

8 Examples a) x² + 4x – 15 = b) 3x² - 7x = -5

9 Homework Page 279 36-41


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