SOLUTION: Hello,
In the proof of the quadractic equation, you begin by dividing both parts by "a".
ax2 (2 is the square)+ bx + c = 0
(divide both sides by a)
x2(2 is the square
Algebra ->
Quadratic Equations and Parabolas
-> SOLUTION: Hello,
In the proof of the quadractic equation, you begin by dividing both parts by "a".
ax2 (2 is the square)+ bx + c = 0
(divide both sides by a)
x2(2 is the square
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Question 111186: Hello,
In the proof of the quadractic equation, you begin by dividing both parts by "a".
ax2 (2 is the square)+ bx + c = 0
(divide both sides by a)
x2(2 is the square) + b/a.x + c/a = 0
(then suddenly)
x2(2 is the square) 2.(b/2.a).x = c/a = 0
Then all of a sudden, a "2" appears. Where did that come from?
Thank you for your help.
Barbara Answer by Earlsdon(6294) (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Deriving the quadratic formula:
Divide by a. Subtract c/a from both sides. Now complete the square in x on the left side by adding the square of half the x-coefficient () to both sides. Factor the left side. Take the square root of both sides. You'll have two answers here, + and - Simplify the contents of the radical. Combine the fractions under the radical over a common denominator () Take the square root of the denominator. Subtract from both sides. Simplify the right side.