Dividing Fractions ➡ Multiply by the reciprocal of the divisor.
Binomial Expansions
Binomial expansions is where an expression is multiplied by itself many items
The (r+1)th term, Tr+1 of the binomial expansion of (x+y)n is given by:
This is the general term.
The middle term of an expansion is found as such:
-The number of terms in an expansion is n+1
-So find middle term of n+1 and that is equal to Tr+1
Finding the term of a binomial expansion Independent of x
This means finding the constant when xn
lightbulbExample
Ex : Find term independent of x in expansion (x²-2/x)²
let term be (r12)(x2)12−r(−x2)r ...now draw out x
(x2)12−r(x−1)r=x0 ...now draw out x
x24−2r(x−r)=x0 (ignore constants)
→ 24−3r=0r=8 then sub in r value into general
Long division in Algebra
Numerator is called the dividend
Denominator is called the divisor
A remainder of 0 means the divisor is a factor of the dividend.
A quotient is the result of division
ALGEBRA 2
Solving Linear Equations
There are three ways to solve Linear equations:
Algebra
Using trial and error
Graphing
Methods of solving simultaneous Linear equations (two variables)
Using trial and error
Graphs - Find point of intersection
Elimination
Substitution
Steps to solve simultaneous equations (three variables)
Select one variable and eliminate it from a pair of equations
Now with two equations and two unknowns eliminate one more variable
chatImportant
NB verify your solutions - sub back in
Solving Quadratic Equations
Graphing
Algebra
Quadratic Formula
x=2a−b±b2−4ac
a = coefficient of x²b = coefficient of xc = constant term
When given the roots change them into factors and multiply
If coefficient of x² is 1:
Quadratic x² - (Sum of roots)x + (Product of roots) = 0
Simultaneous Equations - One linear and One Non-Linear
Always substitute from the linear into the non-linear
Always substitute back into the linear. This will avoid obtaining an incorrect solution.
The Factor Theorem
A polynomial f(x) has a factor (x-a) if and only if f(a)=0
A polynomial f(x) has a factor (x-a) if and only if its graph touches or crosses the x-axis at x=a (a cR)
More about graphs:
The values for x for which f(x)=0 are called roots or zeros
The degree of polynomial is the highest power within the polynomial
The max number of distinct roots a polynomial can have is the same as it's degree
The leading coefficient is the coefficient of the term with the highest power
If a root has an even multiplicity - touching
If a root has an odd multiplicity - Crossing
Even degree - arms of graph both point up or down
Odd degree - arms of graph point in different directions
Right arm points up if leading coefficient is positive
Right arm points down if leading coefficient is negative
NB many polynomials can have the same roots so when finding a polynomial expression it is a possible answer
Unknown Coefficients
'It is true for all values of xcR' means the LHS = RHS
ALGEBRA 3
Surds Equations
A number of the form ±a where a is a positive rational number that is not the square of another rational number, is called a pure quadratic surd. A number of the form a±b, where a is rational and b is a pure quadratic surd, is sometimes called a mixed quadratic surd.
infoNote
means 'the non-negative square root of'
Square both sides of equations to eliminate square root.
Is necessary to check any solution because squaring can introduce an erroneous solution ➜ check into original equation.
Linear Inequalities
An inequality gives a range of values.
Less than | greater than | less than or equal to | greater then or equal to
When multiplying or dividing by a negative number - reverse the inequality sign, as well as changing the signs of all terms in the inequality.
Quadratic and rational inequalities
means 'below the x-axis' | means 'above the x-axis' | means 'on or below the x-axis' | means 'on or above the x-axis'
ALGEBRA 3
Rational inequalities - cannot be sure if denominator is positive/negative
To solve - multiply both sides by (denominator)² which we know is positive.
Absolute Value (Modulus)
The absolute value of a real number x written as |x|, is the magnitude of the number without regard to its sign (i.e. non-negative value of the number).
If x < 0, |x| = -x if x ≥ 0, |x| = x.
When x ≥ 0 and |x| = a then x = -a or x = a
Squaring a modulus removes it's modulus notation.
Notice the graph of y = |x| is a combination of the graph of y=-x on x < 0 x∈R and the graph of y = x on x ≥ 0, x∈R
For modulus inequalities:
If |x| < a, then -a < x < a, where a > 0, a∈R
If |x| > a, then x < -a, or x > a, where a > 0, a∈R
Proof for inequalities
(real)² ≥ 0
Disriminants for proofs
Real roots → b² - 4ac ≥ 0
Real and distinct roots → b² - 4ac > 0
Real and equal roots → b² - 4ac = 0
No real roots → b² - 4ac < 0
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