SOLUTION: Hello, I am trying to figure out if I am on the right track. For some reason I just can't understand how to factor. Thanks in advance.
2t^2 y^4 - 32t^2 (I think at this point I
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-> SOLUTION: Hello, I am trying to figure out if I am on the right track. For some reason I just can't understand how to factor. Thanks in advance.
2t^2 y^4 - 32t^2 (I think at this point I
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Question 221983: Hello, I am trying to figure out if I am on the right track. For some reason I just can't understand how to factor. Thanks in advance.
2t^2 y^4 - 32t^2 (I think at this point I can factor out the t^2)
t^2 (2y^4 - 32) (do I factor the parentheses at this point? I'm not sure where to go from here.) Found 2 solutions by jim_thompson5910, solver91311:Answer by jim_thompson5910(35256) (Show Source):
Factoring out the was certainly the right thing to do, but if you notice, the numerical coefficients on the two original terms have the factor 2 in common. Hence, the correct first step would have been to factor out leaving you with:
But you aren't done, not by a long shot.
Notice that is the difference of two squares, so:
And then notice that is also the difference of two squares, so:
And that's as far as you can go presuming you are confining yourself to the real numbers.