SOLUTION: Hello , Thank you in advance !!! I was wondering how this
expression factors into the square of a binomial ....
x^(4/3) + 1/2 + 1/16^(-4/3)
I know that the answer is
[x^
Algebra ->
Finance
-> SOLUTION: Hello , Thank you in advance !!! I was wondering how this
expression factors into the square of a binomial ....
x^(4/3) + 1/2 + 1/16^(-4/3)
I know that the answer is
[x^
Log On
Question 1028739: Hello , Thank you in advance !!! I was wondering how this
expression factors into the square of a binomial ....
x^(4/3) + 1/2 + 1/16^(-4/3)
I know that the answer is
[x^2/3 + (1/4)x^(-2/3)]^2. This is not the typical factoring
method . I guess it is a perfect square method of some sort but
I am not sure ...please explain!!!!! Answer by Edwin McCravy(20056) (Show Source):
We learn that
factors as
.
Therefore when we are trying to factor a trinomial and we
observe that the first and third terms of the trinomial
happen to be perfect squares:
We always then check to see if the middle term happens to be
twice the product of their square roots. For if so, then the
trinomial factors as the square of a binomial.
We are trying to factor the trinomial:
The first term is the square of
The third term is the square of , so we should treat
this trinomial just as we would treat any trinomial whose
first and last terms are perfect squares.
We find twice the product of their square roots:
The exponents add to zero and is 1, so above we see that twice
the product of their square roots is , which is the middle term
of the trinomial. So the factorization of the trinomial is
Edwin