| 
 
 
| Question 557526:  Another problem. Please help. My last question was nicely solved by  stanbon(47716) and I salute you. the question is:-
 When the expression a^+bx+c is divided by x-2, the remainder is R. When the expression is divided by x+1, the remainder is still R.
 i.) Find the value of b.
 ii.) When the expression is divided by x-4, the remainder is 2R. Find the value of c and R.
 iii.) When the expression is divided by x-t, the remainder is 5R. Find the two possible values of t.
 Answer by KMST(5328)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! i. I suspect you mean
 "When the expression C is divided by x-2, the remainder is R. When the expression is divided by x+1, the remainder is still R."
 You have a quadratic trinomial
  When you divide a polynomial P(x) by (x-a), the original polynomial, P(x), the quotient polynomial, Q(x), and the remainder R, are related through:
 P(x)=Q(x)(x-a)+R (and P(a)=R).
 So,
 P(x)-R = Q(x)(x-a) is divisible by x-a.
 In the case of your polynomial, P(x)-R is divisible by x-2 and by x+1.
 So it is divisible by
 
  Then
  and 
  So
  ii.
 P(4) =
  
  -->  
  iii.
 P(t) =
  =  =  
  -->  Factoring, we get
  so
  has solutions  and  
 | 
  
 | 
 |