Given that
$$P(x) = 125x^3 + 150x^2 + 55x + 6$$
use the factor theorem to prove that $(5x + 1)$ is a factor of $P(x)$ - AQA - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 13 - 2021 - Paper 1
Question 13
Given that
$$P(x) = 125x^3 + 150x^2 + 55x + 6$$
use the factor theorem to prove that $(5x + 1)$ is a factor of $P(x)$.
Factorise $P(x)$ completely.
Hence, prove ... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:Given that
$$P(x) = 125x^3 + 150x^2 + 55x + 6$$
use the factor theorem to prove that $(5x + 1)$ is a factor of $P(x)$ - AQA - A-Level Maths Pure - Question 13 - 2021 - Paper 1
Step 1
use the factor theorem to prove that $(5x + 1)$ is a factor of $P(x)$
96%
114 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
To use the factor theorem, we substitute x=−51 into P(x):
P(−51)=125(−51)3+150(−51)2+55(−51)+6
Calculating each term, we get:
First term: 125⋅−1251=−1
Second term: 150⋅251=6
Third term: 55⋅−51=−11
Constant term: 6
Thus:
P(−51)=−1+6−11+6=0
Since P(−51)=0, by the factor theorem, (5x+1) is indeed a factor of P(x).
Step 2
Factorise $P(x)$ completely
99%
104 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
We can start with the factor (5x+1) and divide P(x) by it to find the other factors:
Performing synthetic division:
The resulting polynomial is:
P(x)=(5x+1)(Ax2+Bx+C)
After finding the quadratic factor, we can factorize:
P(x)=(5x+1)(5x+2)(x+3)
Step 3
prove that $250n^3 + 300n^2 + 110n + 12$ is a multiple of 12
96%
101 rated
Only available for registered users.
Sign up now to view full answer, or log in if you already have an account!
Answer
We start with:
250n3+300n2+110n+12=2(125n3+150n2+55n+6)
Next, we factor out:
=2(5n+1)(5n+2)(5n+3)
The factors (5n+1), (5n+2), and (5n+3) are three consecutive whole numbers. Among any three consecutive integers, at least one is a multiple of 3 and at least one is even, meaning:
This guarantees the product (5n+1)(5n+2)(5n+3) is a multiple of 2 and 3.
Hence:
250n3+300n2+110n+12 is a multiple of 2⋅3=6, and as it is multiplied by 2, it also confirms it is a multiple of 12.