Question 1136677:  The value of q for which the difference between the roots of the equation x^2-qx+8=0 is 2 are 
+-2 
+-4 
+-6 
+-8 
 Found 2 solutions by  ikleyn, greenestamps: Answer by ikleyn(52903)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! . 
I easily can guess:  the roots 2 and 4 gives the product of 8 (the constant term) and the difference of 2.
Their sum is 6, which should be " q", according to Vieta's theorem.
So, the answer is q = 6, based on my guessing.
Let's look what the Algebra solution will give us.
Let x and (x-2) are the roots.
Then their product is 8:
    x*(x-2) = 8
    x^2 - 2x - 8 = 0
    (x-4)*(x+2) = 0.
So, there are 2 roots:  x= 4  and  x= -2.
The value  x= 4  gives that two roots  4 and 2 which I guessed above, with the value  of q= 6.
The value x= -2 gives two roots  -2 and -4, with the value of q = -6.
So, the problem has two answers:  q= 6  and  q= -6.    (Third line of the answers' choice)
 
Thus Algebra solution helped me to find 2 answers to the problem question: more than I could guess (!)
 
 
 
 Answer by greenestamps(13215)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! 
  
According to Vieta's Theorem, for the given equation x^2-qx+8=0, the product of the roots is 8 and the sum of the roots is q.
  
Then, given that the difference between the two roots is 2, a very little bit of mental arithmetic (product of two numbers = 8; difference = 2) finds two solutions -- roots of 2 and 4, or roots of -2 and -4.
  
And those roots make q either 6 or -6.
  
ANSWER: The third choice, -6, is ONE OF the values for q for which the difference between the two roots of the equation is 2. 
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